Tag Archives: health care

4th of July and Health Insurance: Substantive versus statistical significance

A new study being released today, by some of the country’s top health economists, aims to estimate the effects of not having health insurance — and the effects are large.

The researchers used a lottery that the state of Oregon conducted in 2008 to determine who would become eligible to apply for a limited number of Medicaid slots. The researchers compared the health outcomes of those who won the lottery (many of whom then received insurance) and those who did not (who were more likely to remain uninsured).

The researchers have followed the subjects for only a year so far, so the paper has some clear limitations. But it nonetheless suggests that having health insurance substantially improves health. Expanding insurance does not save society money — as some advocates of preventive medicine have claimed — but it does appear to make people mentally and physically healthier.

This is from New York Times writer/blogger David Leonhardt’s column today.

Sounds like a good paper, but I’m sure the limitations are not just limited to following the subjects only a year! But without reading the paper and just going on the summary in Leonhardt’s post, here’s one other problem I see:

[W]e find that insurance is associated with improvements across the board in our measures of self-reported physical and mental health, averaging two-tenths of a standard deviation improvement. These results appear to reflect improvements in mental health and also at least partly a general sense of improved well being; they may also reflect improvements in objective, physical health, but this is more difficult to determine with the data we now have available.

That seems really small!

It seems I pick on Leonhardt a lot, so I’ll throw in another example. Take the 4th of July-makes-you-a-Republican paper–surely you’ve heard of this, right? See this post at the Monkey Cage.

Here’s the abstract:

This paper investigates the role of Fourth of July celebrations in shaping political views and behavior in the United States. We study the impact of Fourth of July during childhood on partisanship and participation later in life. Our method uses daily precipitation data from 1920-1990 to proxy for exogenous variation in participation on Fourth of July as a child. The estimates imply that days without rain on Fourth of July in childhood increase the likelihood of identifying with the Republicans as an adult, voting for the Republican but not the Democratic candidate, and voter turnout. Our findings are significant: one Fourth of July without rain before age 18 increases the likelihood of identifying as a Republican at age 40 by 2 percent, the share of people voting for the Republican candidate at age 40 by 4 percent, and the share of people turning out to vote at age 40 by 0.9 percent. The evidence is consistent with childhood experience having foundational effects less susceptible to adult political influence. It also suggests that there is political congruence between patriotism promoted on Fourth of July and Republican beliefs, as well as Fourth of July transmitting a non-partisan civic duty to vote.

I commented on the original post that 2% seemed kind of small–though it’s true that this is the effect per rainy day. Like everyone else on the interwebz, I haven’t actually read this paper–just the abstract and skimmed the tables.

I think both of these examples are really impressive pieces of research–though I’m more fond of the second one. But they highlight another problem with press coverage of research in causal inference: the risk of failing to distinguish between “statistical” and “substantive” significance.

Turns out others have already posted about this problem elsewhere on the internet. See here, for example.

Health insurance and getting an appointment (ii)

U.S. Plans Stealth Survey on Access to Doctors,” reports the New York Times on June 26, 2011. That’s odd, I think–haven’t they read this other study?

Anyway, apparently they were interested in seeing if people on government funded health plans are less likely to get appointment than those with private insurance. What I thought was really odd was how much details they spilled to the press about the protocol. There didn’t seem to be any way that doctors offices couldn’t prepare themselves for these “mystery shoppers.”

But then today: “Primary care access survey canceled,” reports the Times (via the Boston Globe).

Any sign that the study was canceled because of the reservations I mention above? Sadly no. The Times reports:

Administration officials concluded that the survey could be more of a political liability than it was worth. Doctors and many Republican lawmakers criticized the project

Forecasting the effects of the health care reform bill

“Health Law in a Swirl of Forecasts,” reads the headline of this June 21 New York Times article.

The hook is a study by the firm McKinsey claiming that the effect of the law will be that people will lose their employer-provided health insurance. Apparently the White House and others complained that McKinsey wasn’t being transparent about their methodology, and it was revealed that they reached this conclusion simply from polling a sample of business owners. Also in the story are brief mentions of several other studies of this topic.

It’s nice that for once people are asking questions about methodology–and that as a result, the news media mentions it. But in the end, it’s your guess is as good as mine, as this quote from an American Enterprise Scholar indicates:

He said the many variables in the law made predictions difficult. “Whatever you assume, is what you get out of it,” he said.

Medicaid and Getting an Appointment

Sixty-six percent of those who mentioned Medicaid-CHIP (Children’s Health Insurance Program) were denied appointments, compared with 11 percent who said they had private insurance, according to an article being published Thursday in The New England Journal of Medicine.

From an article in today’s New York Times. For once I have no objections.

Bullying and domestic violence / telemedecine and Hepatitis care

BOTTOM LINE: Boys who are bullies are more likely as adults to be violent toward partners.

CAUTIONS: The study was based on self-reporting. It relied on participants’ interpretation of bullying and what they could recall from their childhood.

WHERE TO FIND IT: Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, online June 6

[...]

BOTTOM LINE: Connecting rural primary care doctors to specialists through regular conferences improved care for underserved hepatitis C patients.

CAUTIONS: The study included no control group of patients treated in rural settings. The lead author received grants from Vertex Pharamaceuticals of Cambridge, which is preparing to market a new hepatitis C drug.

WHERE TO FIND IT: New England Journal of Medicine, June 9

From the June 13 Boston Globe (lifestyle section).