info@healthcostinstitute.org

mediA@healthcostinstitute.org

  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • Link
Search
Health Care Cost Institute
  • Home
  • About US
    • HCCI Data
    • HCCI Staff
      • CEO
      • Careers
    • Financial Statements
    • Governing Board 
  • Data Tools
    • Data Access Hub
    • HCCI Vitals
    • Healthprices.org
    • HMI
    • DataNerd
  • Research
    • Original Reports
    • HCCUR
    • Vitals HMI
Search
External Research

Medical Care: The Differential Effects of Insurance Mandates on Health Care Spending for Children’s Autism Spectrum Disorder

Molly Candon, Colleen Barry, Andrew Epstein, Steven Marcus, Alene Kennedy-Hendricks, Ming Xie, David Mandell
March 1, 2018

ABSTRACT

Objectives: There is substantial variation in treatment intensity among children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). This study asks whether policies that target health care utilization for ASD affect children differentially based on this variation. Specifically, we examine the impact of state-level insurance mandates that require commercial insurers to cover certain treatments for ASD for any fully-insured plan.

Methods: Using insurance claims between 2008 and 2012 from three national insurers, we used a difference-in-differences approach to compare children with ASD who were subject to mandates to children with ASD who were not. To allow for differential effects, we estimated quantile regressions that evaluate the impact of mandates across the spending distributions of three outcomes: (1) monthly spending on ASD-specific outpatient services; (2) monthly spending on ASD-specific inpatient services; and (3) quarterly spending on psychotropic medications.

Results: The change in spending on ASD-specific outpatient services attributable to mandates varied based on the child’s level of spending. For those children with ASD who were subject to the mandate, monthly spending for a child in the 95th percentile of the ASD-specific outpatient spending distribution increased by $1460 (P<0.001). In contrast, the effect was only $2 per month for a child in the fifth percentile (P<0.001). Mandates did not significantly affect spending on ASD-specific inpatient services or psychotropic medications.

Conclusions: State-level insurance mandates have larger effects for those children with higher levels of spending. To the extent that spending approximates treatment intensity and the underlying severity of ASD, these results suggest that mandates target children with greater service needs.

Medical Care: The Differential Effects of Insurance Mandates on Health Care Spending for Children’s Autism Spectrum Disorder
Access the Article

Share this post

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
Topics: Autism Children Commercially Insured Inpatient Spending Medical Care Outpatient Spending Peer Reviewed Journals

Enhance your research using customized data analysis

Are you interested in a specific health care topic? HCCI can use our commercial and government data resources and unique analytic experience to help you. Just reach out!

Partner with us

About

We are a mission-driven, independent, nonprofit organization situated at the nexus of data, analytics, and action.

Contact

1100 G Street NW, Suite 600
Washington DC, 20005

info@healthcostinstitute.org
media@healthcostinstitute.org

Research

HCCI Publications
Research Resources

Data

Data Access Hub
Data Tools

Quick Links

Partner with HCCI
HCCI Newsletter
Careers

  • LinkedIn
  • X
  • Link
  • Bluesky

© 2025 Health Care Cost Institute Inc.
Unless explicitly noted, the content on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0 License

Scroll to Top