Medicaid, Uninsured Admissions Outpaced Private-Pay Admissions 1997-2008

Medicaid admissions grew 30 percent and admissions for uninsured patients grew 27 percent from 1997-2008, compared with 5 percent for privately insured patients, according to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

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AHRQ also found the following:
•    The average cost for a Medicaid patient stay in the 10-year period rose 11 percent, compared with 34 percent for privately insured stays and 26 percent for uninsured patients.
•    The average Medicaid patient stay cost a hospital $6,900 in 2008, compared with about the same cost for the uninsured and $8,400 for private-pay patients.
•    Medicaid patient stays in 2008 cost hospitals $51 billion, compared with $117 billion for private-pay and $16 billion for the uninsured.
•    Medicaid was the primary payor for more than 18 percent of the nearly 40 million hospital stays in 2008.
•    Maternity-related and newborn infant care accounted for half of all Medicaid hospital stays, compared with one-third of private-pay stays and one-fifth of uninsured stays.
•    About 6 percent of Medicaid stays were for mental health and substance abuse, compared with 4 percent for private-pay and 10 percent for the uninsured.

Read the AHRQ release on Medicaid admissions.

Read other coverage about Medicaid costs:

Supreme Court to Hear States’ Call to Cut Medicaid Spending

Governors Want Reform Law Changed So They Can Reduce Medicaid Coverage

More Than Half of States Expanded Medicaid Programs in 2010

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