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June 2006 (Volume 84)
Quarterly Article
Jessica Greene
Jan Blustein
Beth C. Weitzman
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Many studies have explored the extent to which physicians’ characteristics and Medicaid program factors influence physicians’ decisions to accept Medicaid patients. In this article, we turn to patient race/ethnicity and residential segregation as potential influences. Using the 2000/2001 Community Tracking Study and other sources we show that physicians are significantly less likely to participate in Medicaid in areas where the poor are nonwhite and in areas that are racially segregated. Surprisingly-and contrary to the prevailing Medicaid participation theory-we find no link between poverty segregation and Medicaid participation when controlling for these racial factors. Accordingly, this study contributes to an accumulating body of circumstantial evidence that patient race influences physicians’ choices, which in turn may contribute to racial disparities in access to health care.
Author(s): Jessica Greene; Jan Blustein; Beth C. Weitzman
Keywords: Medicaid; race; physician participation; segregation
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Volume 84, Issue 2 (pages 239–272) DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0009.2006.00447.x Published in 2006