Issue: June 2024
Fact checked byRichard Smith

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March 26, 2024
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Switching to high-deductible health plan increases odds for diabetes-related complications

Issue: June 2024
Fact checked byRichard Smith
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Key takeaways:

  • Adults with diabetes are more likely to have complications if they switch to a high-deductible health plan.
  • The risk for complications rises with each additional year of high-deductible health plan enrollment.

Adults with diabetes who are forced to switch to a high-deductible health insurance plan have higher risk for diabetes-related complications than those who remain on a regular health plan, according to study data.

“High-deductible health plans, which are increasingly common — both because their lower monthly premiums make them appealing and because employers increasingly offer no other options to their employees for health coverage — are not appropriate for people living with diabetes,” Rozalina G. McCoy, MD, MS, associate professor of medicine at University of Maryland School of Medicine and director of precision medicine and population health at the University of Maryland Institute for Health Computing, told Healio. “Our study, which looked at the implications of people with diabetes being forced to switch from a regular health plan to a high-deductible health plan because their employer offered no other option, found that people who are forced to switch experience significantly higher rates of all diabetes complications compared to other similar people with diabetes who were not forced to switch.”

Rozalina G. McCoy, MD, MS

McCoy and colleagues conducted a retrospective cohort study with data from 245,055 adults with diabetes who were enrolled in an employer-sponsored health plan that did not have a high deductible for at least 1 year from 2010 to 2018. Adults were considered to have been forced to switch to a high-deductible health plan if the only health plans available to them had an in-network deductible that exceeded the minimum individual deductible qualifying them for a health savings account. Participants who switched to a high-deductible health plan were compared with a group of adults who were not forced to switch. Data on macrovascular complications, microvascular complications, lower-extremity complications, retinopathy diagnosis and treatment, and blindness were collected. Data were obtained from the OptumLabs Data Warehouse.

High-deductible plans increase complications odds

Of the study group, 42,326 adults switched to a high-deductible health plan (mean age, 52 years; 46.7% women) and 202,729 remained in a non-high-deductible health plan (mean age, 53 years; 44.3% women). Adults who switched were more likely to have myocardial infarction (OR = 1.11; 95% CI, 1.06-1.16), stroke (OR = 1.15; 95% CI, 1.09-1.21), hospitalization for heart failure (OR = 1.35; 95% CI, 1.3-1.41), end-stage kidney disease (OR = 2.53; 95% CI, 2.38-2.7), a lower-extremity complication (OR = 2.23; 95% CI, 2.17-2.29), proliferative retinopathy (OR = 1.17; 95% CI, 1.13-1.21), blindness (OR = 2.35; 95% CI, 2.18-2.54) and retinopathy treatment (OR = 2.28; 95% CI, 2.15-2.41) than adults who did not switch.

Each year that participants were enrolled in a high-deductible health plan increased the odds for MI (OR = 1.07; 95% CI, 1.06-1.09), stroke (OR = 1.08; 95% CI, 1.06-1.1), hospitalization for heart failure (OR = 1.14; 95% CI, 1.12-1.15), end-stage kidney disease (OR = 1.34; 95% CI, 1.32-1.37), a lower-extremity complication (OR = 1.33; 95% CI, 1.32-1.34), proliferative retinopathy (OR = 1.05; 95% CI, 1.04-1.07), blindness (OR = 1.31; 95% CI, 1.28-1.34) and retinopathy treatment (OR = 1.29; 95% CI, 1.26-1.31).

Speak with patients about coverage

McCoy said the findings were concerning because an increasing number of people in the U.S. have high-deductible health plans.

“Patients with high-deductible health plans — consciously and subconsciously — ration their health care utilization, and we know that they do not preferentially restrict care that we believe to be low value; instead, they often limit care that is clinically important,” McCoy said. “We need to speak with our patients about their health insurance coverage and financial barriers to care so that we can work with them to address these barriers and make sure our patients get the care and treatments they need to be healthy. We also need to advocate to reform high-deductible health plans, if not eliminate them altogether, which I personally think is the most appropriate way forward. Diabetes complications can and should be prevented, but high-deductible plans force patients to ration their care, and so they develop these serious and irreversible diabetes complications that result in morbidity, disability and ultimately death.”

McCoy said future studies need to investigate how people with diabetes make decisions with health care services when they are enrolled in a high-deductible health plan.

“We need more research about how health policies impact care delivery and health,” McCoy said. “Unfortunately, there are not many agencies and organizations that fund such research, with most funding focused on biomedical and not policy or econometric analyses, but I hope that this changes and more work can be done to improve how care is delivered, paid for and accessed.”

For more information:

Rozalina G. McCoy, MD, MS, can be reached at rozalina.mccoy@som.umaryland.edu.