Abstract
Despite the growth in the supply of physicians nationally, there has been a persistent shortage of healthcare providers in areas known as Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs). In this paper, I exploit the large insurance expansion under the Affordable Care Act to study whether the insurance expansion, a demand-side policy, affected the distribution of healthcare providers to geographic HPSAs. Specifically, I examine the per-capita density of non-federal and professionally active primary care physicians, specialist physicians, physician assistants, and advanced practice-registered nurses. I use county-level data from 2010 to 2019 and difference-in-differences and event-study approaches. I find that, despite a large increase in the number of people with insurance, HPSA counties in Medicaid expansion states did not experience a greater growth in primary care physicians than HPSA counties in non-expansion states. However, the density of specialist physicians and mid-level providers including physician assistants and advanced practice-registered nurses grew by more in expansion HPSA counties relative to non-expansion HPSA counties. Consistent with the predictions of the theoretical framework and Newhouse et al. (Bell J Econ 13(2):493–505, 1982), the findings suggest that provider diffusion to shortage areas is more likely to occur when the overall supply of providers increases.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Empirical Economics |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jun 13 2025 |
Externally published | Yes |
Scopus Subject Areas
- Statistics and Probability
- Mathematics (miscellaneous)
- Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
- Economics and Econometrics
Keywords
- Geographic distribution of healthcare providers
- Health insurance expansion
- Health professional shortage areas