key: cord-0021337-bri7jfym authors: Zhang, Jinting; Wu, Xiu title: Predict Health Care Accessibility for Texas Medicaid Gap date: 2021-09-15 journal: Healthcare (Basel) DOI: 10.3390/healthcare9091214 sha: c422fbf5ca71401358db03c77716510e18f8fcdb doc_id: 21337 cord_uid: bri7jfym Medicaid is a unique approach in ensuring the below poverty population obtains free insurance coverage under federal and state provisions in the United States. Twelve states without expanded Medicaid caused two million people who were under the poverty line into health insecurity. Principal Component-based logistical regression (PCA-LA) is used to consider health status (HS) as a dependent variable and fourteen social-economic indexes as independent variables. Four composite components incorporated health conditions (i.e., “no regular source of care” (NRC), “last check-up more than a year ago” (LCT)), demographic impacts (i.e., four categorized adults (AS)), education (ED), and marital status (MS). Compared to the unadjusted LA, direct adjusted LA, and PCA-unadjusted LA three methods, the PCA-LA approach exhibited objective and reasonable outcomes in presenting an odd ratio (OR). They included that health condition is positively significant to HS due to beyond one OR, and negatively significant to ED, AS, and MS. This paper provided quantitative evidence for the Medicaid gap in Texas to extend Medicaid, exposed healthcare geographical inequity, offered a sight for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to improve the Medicaid program and make political justice for the Medicaid gap. Health care access is convoluted, emerging with different system constraints depending on the complex healthcare needs, improving access rests on system-targeted facilitators, interventions, and policies [1] . Despite the adoption of universal healthcare coverage (UHC) by member countries of the World Health Organization (WHO), the U.S. has the most expensive healthcare system in the world, comparatively [2] . Healthcare is a privilege for those who can afford it and is one of the most crucial issues in American society [3] . In fact, the American healthcare system is a hodgepodge of private and public insurance plans with cracks under the iron triangle of quality, cost, and access [4, 5] . Increasing costs have forced many Americans more vulnerable to higher healthcare payments and potentially reduced access to care. Thus, healthcare is a top concern for those who are unable to access all the essential health services that they need. It is worth noting that providing scientifically explicit corroboration contributes to enlarged healthcare access. Medicaid is the largest common federal health care coverage program for low-income individuals of diverse ages in the United States and serves as a core institution that shapes public health crises, racial injustice, and electoral politics [6] . It was created by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1965, playing a vital role in alleviating health inequities and reducing recidivism [7] [8] [9] [10] . However, some regulations in Medicaid restrict eligibility, such as income, asset, and age requirement, dependent children limitation, and categorical eligibility (pregnant women, children, and disabled people). Those lead to the Medicaid gap is increased and should be considered. The Medicaid gap is defined as those who do not have private insurance and unqualified Medicaid requirements. They are exposed to high risks of health care, social security, as well as vulnerability. In 2012, the Supreme Court According to the Texas Medicaid yearly income limits standard, the Medicaid gap is defined as those whose income is less than USD 35,000 per family with one person (or USD 47,000 with two-person) without any insurance. Then, we conduct the intercorrelations among independent variables before performing PCA. If correlations exist, we extracted related factors of health status by PCA; otherwise, we directly recoded related independent variables to model the LR. Through the comparison of unconditional requirements and adjusted requirements, accordingly, the distinctions automatically revealed the pros and cons of the ACA policy in Texas. The study framework is in Figure 2 . According to the Texas Medicaid yearly income limits standard, the Medicaid gap is defined as those whose income is less than USD 35,000 per family with one person (or USD 47,000 with two-person) without any insurance. Then, we conduct the inter-correlations among independent variables before performing PCA. If correlations exist, we extracted related factors of health status by PCA; otherwise, we directly recoded related independent variables to model the LR. Through the comparison of unconditional requirements and adjusted requirements, accordingly, the distinctions automatically revealed the pros and cons of the ACA policy in Texas. The study framework is in Figure 2 . Data on 63,083 cases from 2013 to 2020, including 8 years of questionnaires in Table 1 , were collected from The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey (BRFSS), which is a national wide, random-digit-dial telephone survey. Investigation contents involved demographic information, health behaviors information, access ways to care, and health quo. This study obtained Medicaid gap data for all registered 18-64 years old people whose household income was less than 138% of the federal poverty guidelines without any insurance during 2013-2019 in Texas from the Center for Health Statistics in the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS). The Medicaid gap addresses of all cases were geocoded to their exact geographic locations (latitudes and longitudes) by the Texas DSHS. Above-Poverty Medicaid Medicaid Gap Total 2013 638 6871 575 8084 2014 939 9912 874 11,725 2015 904 9481 764 11,149 2016 670 8070 509 9249 2017 732 8252 613 9597 2018 573 7370 472 8415 2019 2249 1483 1094 4826 2020 21 7 10 38 Total 6726 51446 4911 63,083 Note: type 1-private insurance, type 2-Medicaid, type 3-Medicaid gap. Data on 63,083 cases from 2013 to 2020, including 8 years of questionnaires in Table 1 , were collected from The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey (BRFSS), which is a national wide, random-digit-dial telephone survey. Investigation contents involved demographic information, health behaviors information, access ways to care, and health quo. This study obtained Medicaid gap data for all registered 18-64 years old people whose household income was less than 138% of the federal poverty guidelines without any insurance during 2013-2019 in Texas from the Center for Health Statistics in the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS). The Medicaid gap addresses of all cases were geocoded to their exact geographic locations (latitudes and longitudes) by the Texas DSHS. In this study, health status is the subject of observation as a unique dependent variable, which has two values such as 0 (i.e., health "fair" or "poor") and 1 (i.e., good health). Independent variables contain 14 variables, referring to health conditions, demographic data, education, and economic conditions four perspectives, as being seen in Table 2 . Health conditions refer to "no regular source of care" (NRC), "last check-up more than a year ago" (LCT), "could not see a doctor due to cost" (NSD), "skipped medication due to cost" (SMC), "cardiovascular disease "(CVD), "diabetes" (DT), and "current smoker" (CS)-7 variables. Demographical data involve age structure, sex, race, and marital status. Economic conditions include employment (EM) and "living with dependent children" (LDC). Educations consist of "did not finish high school", "high school graduate/GED", and "college graduate"-three scenarios. Three medical types are distributed in diverse variables in Table 2 . In this study, study areas are categorized by above-poverty, Medicaid, and the Medicaid gap three insurance types in 13 areas in Texas in Figure 3 . In this study, study areas are categorized by above-poverty, Medicaid, and the Medicaid gap three insurance types in 13 areas in Texas in Figure 3 . Logical regression is used for a broad range of research applications and is especially popular with medical research in which the dependent variable has a binary format outcome of either 0 or 1, true or false, yes or no, high or low. The general mathematical equation of logistical regression is written as follows, where Y is the dependent variable Logical regression is used for a broad range of research applications and is especially popular with medical research in which the dependent variable has a binary format outcome of either 0 or 1, true or false, yes or no, high or low. The general mathematical equation of logistical regression is written as follows, where Y is the dependent variable based on X 1 , X 2 [15] . In this research, we firstly standardized the matrix X with the independent variables into X*. Then, we extracted the r number of the principal components under the condition of r number of the sum of eigenvalue beyond 1. After that, the orthogonal matrix β with eigenvector was divided as β = (β1|β2), so the r number of values are presented as Z 1 = X*β1, the following equation is calculated. where Z 1 , Z 2 , . . . , Z r is viewed as diversely extracted factors. The relationship between factors equals 0 so that those factors are defined as independent variables. According to logistic regression this is a classification algorithm, so the assumption is that the coefficients of the factors equal to a 1 , a 2 , . . . , a r , the model is created as follows: We should conduct the Wald test after obtaining λ i . In light of SPSS statistical software (IBM, Armonk, NY, USA), the covariance matrix is calculated by the following equation. In light of the assumption of the likelihood ratio, α r = (α 1 , α 2 , . . . . . . , α r ) is met by a normal distribution. It leads to λ qualified for normal distribution that has characteristics of stationary in linear transformation. When the covariance of λ is captured, we will obtain the Wald test in the context of λ = 0 using the following equation. If parts of independent variables are inter-correlated, we can just employ PCA to remove the association between a part of the variables based on the above steps [16] . The setting of the threshold value is a very important aspect of logistic regression, and 0.6 is defined as the threshold value in this study. The design of the study aims at eliminating multicollinearity between explanatory variables. The following procedure should be considered and ordered in sequence. (1) Pearson correlation analysis in dependent variables. The bivariate Pearson correlation is used to estimate correlations among pairs of variables. The coefficients are revealed whether a statistically significant linear relationship exists between two continuous variables, as well as directions and strengths of a linear relationship. In the SPSS environment, the function of a bivariate is completed by choosing the correlate option of the analyzing menus [17] . (2) PCA to extract major components. Based on correlation analysis, we performed nine explanatory variables to extract component factors using PCA. The dataset was examined using Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin (KMO) and Bartlett's Test of Sphericity. The KMO test compares the correlation statistics to identify if the variables include sufficient differences to extract unique factors. A KMO value of 0.56 for nine explanatory variables is more than the cutoff value of 0.7. The Bartlett's Test of Sphericity (BTS) value of 0.0 was significant (p < 0.001), validating that correlation between variables does exist in the population. Communality is a common variance between 0 and 1, using the remaining variables as factors, which was used to determine if any variables should be excluded from the factor analysis. A 0.7 cutoff is used to determine the significance of explanatory variables [18] . Using an eigenvalue threshold greater than 1.0, four factors are identified that could explain a cumulative 64.7% of the variance after six iterations ( Figure 3 ). A varimax rotation was used to assist in the interpretation of the PCA analysis. The rotated component matrix was examined for variables with a cutoff of 0.7. (3) Perform logistical regression on major components. Geographic disparities in health care are well noted [19] [20] [21] [22] , but seldom research has shown healthcare spending varies by geographical location in the Medicaid gap via statistical analysis. Even some ethnic groups may be under-represented in the Medicaid expansion population because they are more likely to live in states that have not expanded Medicaid [23, 24] . Current studies highlighted the policy adjustment from the qualitative analysis [25] [26] [27] [28] except for Spencer et al. Carolina for health access was conducted in Statistical inference, counter-comparative multi-variated indexes were not involved [29] . In addition, potential risks of chronic diseases were not estimated in the research. Most importantly, multicollinearity issues are not mentioned, which is a phenomenon that undermines the statistical significance of an independent variable, increases the standard deviation of variables, as well as the inverse direction of coefficients [30] [31] [32] . Logistical regression is generally popular in the application of epidemiology [33] [34] [35] [36] ; most research investigated models without eliminating multicollinearity among variables. PCA is one of the effective ways to reduce dimensionality and minimize multicollinearity. Currently published articles of logistical regression based on PCA are focused on genome-wide association studies [37] and disease research, such as gestational diabetes mellitus [38] and nephropathy [39] . Health care accessibility for the Texas Medicaid Gap took advantage of principal component analysis (PCA) to eliminate multicollinearity negative effects and to compare comprehensive social-economic impacts between unadjusted conditions and adjusted conditions. Therefore, PCA-based LA health access analysis of the medical gap is beneficial to provide scientific evidence regarding whether implementing ACA or not, to balance Medicaid policies in the U.S. (4) T-tests and F-tests were used to validate the significance of the model. T-test compares the means of two independent groups in order to determine whether there is statistical evidence that the associated population means are significantly different. In SPSS, the "Independent-Samples t-test" function is selected in the "compare mean" default of analyzing menu [40] . In addition, the F-test can be used for determining whether the variances of two groups differ from each other. In the SPSS environment, "One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA Analysis)" is selected as "Homogeneity of variance test" in "compare means" of "options" [41] . Medicaid gap has the biggest barrier in health condition among all insurance coverages, regarding the comparison between "bad" and "good" answers, including those in Medicaid gap were twice as likely to represent fair or poor health (72.5% versus 32.7% and 17.9%, p < 0.001); "no regular source of care" is 67.3%, higher than above-poverty (26%), lower than Medicaid (74.9%). In the performance of "last check-up more than a year ago", the Medicaid gap is the highest one (20.1% above-poverty, 23.6% Medicaid, 54% Medicaid gap). In the investigation of "could not see a doctor due to cost ", the Medicaid gap is the highest one (23.4% above-poverty, 18.4% Medicaid, 51.9% Medicaid gap). In the investigation of "skipped medication due to cost", the Medicaid gap is the number one (55.5% above-poverty, 48.9% Medicaid, 76.7% Medicaid gap). In "cardiovascular disease" comparison, the Medicaid gap took up the highest one (13.5% above-poverty, 10.2% Medicaid, 16.1% Medicaid gap). In the diabetes investigation, the Medicaid gap is the highest one (18% above-poverty, 31.7% Medicaid, 42.6% Medicaid gap). In the investigation of "current smoker", the Medicaid gap is the number one (20.8% above-poverty, 11.9% Medicaid, 24.6% Medicaid gap). The disparity of demographic in the Medicaid gap is more striking than others in three aspects. First, according to statistical investigations in Table 2 , mostly, individuals in the Medicaid gap were younger (48.8 years) than either traditional Medicaid (59.9 years) or above-poverty Texan (54.0 years). The age distribution in the Medicaid gap is concentrated on those who are older than 25 and younger than 44. On the contrary, the age distribution in above-poverty and Medicaid are congregated on people who are beyond 55 years old. Second, the female population in the Medicaid gap (63.7%) is higher than either the above-poverty or Medicaid, even though the male weight of 36.3% is higher than 34.7% of the above-poverty group but lower than 45.3% of the Medicaid population. At last, the Hispanic population in Medicaid gap is the highest one (above-poverty 44.7%, Medicaid 31.3%, Medicaid gap 54%), compared to the non-Hispanic population. The Medicaid gap has a higher vulnerability than either the above-poverty or Medicaid concerning economic, education and marital status. First, the Medicaid gap has a poor economic condition as regards two folds. Those who were unemployed in the Medicaid gap (49.5%) is higher than 45.8% Medicaid, lower than 69.7% of the above-poverty group. On the other hand, living with dependent children is reported the highest one among three groups (31.5% above-poverty, 18.5% Medicaid, 55.5% Medicaid gap). Second, "did not finish high school" in the Medicaid gap (37.3%) are higher than either the above-poverty (22.7%) or Medicaid (21.4%), meaning the Medicaid gap had lower educational attainment. Finally, 64.6% of single people in the Medicaid gap are lower than the above-poverty (67.9%) but higher than Medicaid (40%). The Medicaid gap has beyond a half portion of someone who experience loneliness, which results in inhibited either sociability problems [42] or mental health issues [43] . Before checking correlations, all independent variables should be standardized to have a mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1 (unit variance). In light of Table 3 , 14 explanatory variables are significant to the dependent variable of HS due to a p-value less than 0.05. Nevertheless, if independent variables are not significant to each other, they also should be eliminated before conducting the PCA. In this study, sex, race, EM, CVD, and DT are not significant to connect other variables. They admittedly do not participate in modeling LR models. Meanwhile, the rest of the nine independent variables have correlated with each other due to coefficients not equal to zero. That is why we choose the PCA to create new uncorrelated variables that successively maximize variance. Table 4 gave us the direct relationship between factors and explanatory variables. The structure of components is shown in Figure 4 . The first factor represents high loading on variables related to LCT and NRC, which have high similarities, indicating that HS is positively related to health conditions. Factor 2, called the education index, is positively related to the population who have reached various degrees. Factor 3 represents age structure, which is negatively related to HS, meaning older people have a worse health status. Factor 4 was the marital status index, positively affecting HS. Healthcare 2021, 9, x 10 of 19 Table 4 gave us the direct relationship between factors and explanatory variables. The structure of components is shown in Figure 4 . The first factor represents high loading on variables related to LCT and NRC, which have high similarities, indicating that HS is positively related to health conditions. Factor 2, called the education index, is positively related to the population who have reached various degrees. Factor 3 represents age structure, which is negatively related to HS, meaning older people have a worse health status. Factor 4 was the marital status index, positively affecting HS. This research considered two scenarios in the context of three various insurance coverage conditions, consisting of logistical regression models based on PCA outcomes and direct logistical models. Each scenario also reflected diverse impacts on the independent variable in unadjusted or adjusted Medicaid policies. At the same time, it is readily to see a clear comparison between the PCA and the non-PCA model, and a discrepancy between unadjusted impacts and adjusted impacts via Table 5 . Adjusted PCA-PCA- This research considered two scenarios in the context of three various insurance coverage conditions, consisting of logistical regression models based on PCA outcomes and direct logistical models. Each scenario also reflected diverse impacts on the independent variable in unadjusted or adjusted Medicaid policies. At the same time, it is readily to see a clear comparison between the PCA and the non-PCA model, and a discrepancy between unadjusted impacts and adjusted impacts via Table 5 . Through PCA, Factor 1 in Table 5 interpreted health condition changes regarding LCT and NRC. It is the most remarkable among factors. From the NRC perspective, despite the value in traditional Medicaid, it is not significant to health status owing to a p-value beyond 0.05, the p-values in beyond poverty and Medicaid gap are less than 0.01, indicating the value are statistically significant. In the beyond poverty group, the OR value equals 1.33 response to "no" as referent group in terms of "no regular source of care", meaning those who had private insurances, but no regular check-up sources had a 133% higher chance of health risks when compared with people who had a regular source of care within private insurances conditions and a 95% confidence interval (CI). In the Medicaid gap, the OR value is 1.37 under CI 95%, implying those who did not have insurances and regular check-up sources had a 137% higher chance of health risks when compared with people who had a regular source of care in the Medicaid gap group. Most importantly, OR values under CI 95% are over 1 in beyond poverty and Medicaid gap situations, including two meanings. On one hand, an increase of "no regular source of care" results in a rise of the probability of health improvement. On the other hand, it is the outcomes of HS after adjustment tends to 1 (i.e., good health). At the same time, the OR value of 1.37 in the Medicaid gap and CI 95% is higher than the OR value of 1.33 in the beyond poverty group, portraying that the group of the Medicaid gap is more vulnerable than the group who have private insurances. Through comparisons of adjusted outcomes in having PCA and without PCA, the OR value of 3.29 of private insurance coverage in the direct LA model is higher than 1.33 in implementing PCA-LA, and 5.8 OR value of Medicaid gap in the direct LA model are higher than 1.37 in implementing PCA in response to referents, assuming that biased co-efficient estimates or very large standard errors for the logistic regression coefficients are hidden in the models [44] . From the LCT perspective, the difference of the LA model between having PCA and not having PCA is a direction change. When the OR value is less than 1 in the before PCA model, this means the LCT is negatively significant to HS and the values tend to be 1 (i.e., good health). Conversely, when the OR value is beyond 1 in the after PCA model, this means the LCT positively affects HS and the value tends to be 0 (i.e., "fair or poor" health). Factor 2 after PCA in Table 5 is defined as the demographical adjustment of age structure. The referent is those whose age is less than 25. The predictors of AS under CI 95% are significant to HS in the above-poverty and Medicaid gap, due to a p-value less than 0.01. As in previous PCA analysis, AS is identified as a unique impact factor. The OR value under CI 95% is similar in the direct unconditional LA and the unadjusted PCA-LA, meaning recoding AS is not necessary. In the above-poverty group, the OR values of (0.08 in PCA-LA, 0.23 in the direct LA) those whose ages are older than 55 are the lowest OR values among the four age levels under CI 95%. It means that those who are beyond 55 years old are the most vulnerable group in the four various age groups. In the same vein, beyond 55-aged people are at the highest risk group of health care in the Medicaid gap. The OR values toward 0 of HS (i.e., "fair or poor" health), set forth that age structure increasing leads to a decline of the possibility of health risks after the adjusted insurance policy. When the OR value decayed, it displayed a linear attenuation regardless of insurance types. Factor 3 in Table 5 points to education impacts. Those who are already college graduates are viewed as referents. All predictors of AS under CI 95% are significant to HS in three insurance types, except for PCA-LA in the Medicaid insurance group. According to PCA analysis, ED is extracted as a unique impact factor due to the beyond 0.7 threshold. The OR value under CI 95% is identical in the direct unconditional LA and the unadjusted PCA-LA, meaning recoding AS is not necessary. In three insurance types, the OR values in those who have not finished their high school degree or passed the GED are the lowest OR values, meaning they have the highest health risks results from an OR less than 1. The OR values less than 1 of HS (i.e., "fair or poor" health), delineated that education increasing triggers a decline of the possibility of health risks after the adjusted insurance policy. In addition, the Medicaid gap changes are more remarkable than the other two insurances after adjustment since the OR values are higher than the other two groups. Factor 4 in Table 5 refers to marital status impacts. Those who are married are regarded as referents. MS is a dichotomous independent variable. Interestingly, although the directly adjusted LA model is of no significance in the above-poverty and Medicaid gap, the PCA-LA is significant in the context of the three insurances. According to PCA analysis, MS is extracted as a unique impact factor due to the beyond 0.7 threshold. The OR value under CI 95% is identical in the direct unconditional LA and the unadjusted PCA-LA, meaning recoding MS is not necessary. After PCA analysis, the OR values in the three insurance types in the PCA-LA models are lower than the unadjusted OR, demonstrating it is essential to implement some other variables to control. Furthermore, those who are single had higher health risks compared to married people. The reason is that the OR value is less than 1. The OR values toward 0 of HS (i.e., "fair or poor" health), described marital status increasing stimulates a decline in the possibility of health risks after the adjusted insurance policy after the policy adjustment. In addition, the change after adjustment in the Medicaid gap is more remarkable than the other two insurances since the OR values are higher than the other two insurances. In this research, Factors 1-4 are selected to conduct the T-test and F-test, respectively. Four components in the T-test have statistical significance owing to a p-value less than 0.05 and CI not across 0 value in Table 6 . Four components in the F-test have statistical significance due to a p-value less than 0.05 in Table 7 . We assumed that four main components are passed through the T-test and the F-test. This paper pinpointed the health access for the Medicaid gap, a multidimensional construct, going beyond its (mis)interpretation as a financial barrier in the existing political discourse on healthcare in the U.S. It addressed the relevance of understanding access for the Medicaid gap in the context of public health, expanding on the system levelers for change and potential approaches to drive change [45] . To begin with, the current problems in Texas are not just multiple chronic illnesses, but also health barriers. The Medicaid gap reports more multiple chronic conditions than the traditional Medicaid group in terms of two aspects. On one hand, the highest risk of multiple chronic conditions inferred that most of the Medicaid gap population is facing a more serious health crises without insurance coverage than the traditional Medicaid. On the other hand, they have been in the unhealthy status for a long time for lack of immediate therapies, which leads to complex medical needs. Notably, the Medicaid gap presented higher rates of access barriers than that of either the above-poverty group or the traditional Medicaid population, which directly leads to large, missed opportunities for preventive care of chronic diseases. There is a consensus of preventive services that could reduce health care expenses by early interventions to avoid disease worsening [46] . Second, economic hardship trip over the capability of the Medicaid gap. The Hispanic population makes up the highest percentage in Texas (50.4%), and females occupied 63.7% of the Medicaid gap, while the proportion of living with dependent children in the Medicaid gap is 55.5%, the highest among the three categories. Those in the Medical gap also account for the highest percentage (37.3%) to report not finishing high school. On other hand, the high unemployment rate in the Medicaid gap made them not afford self-sufficiency. Most importantly, those in the Medicaid gap population were reported having employment opportunities more than the traditional Medicaid population, while the percentage of those married in the Medicaid gap is higher than the traditional Medicaid gap. That illustrates they work hard for their family, ignoring their health benefit requirements. In addition, they pay attention to their earnings, rather than health benefits when looking for a job. After the expansion of Medicaid, the health access in the Medicaid gap is underlyingly broad in Texas. Especially, health warranty for the vulnerable population is dramatically improved. By comparison of direct LA and PCA-LA, ACA adjustment in Texas could mitigate health pressure in the Medicaid gap and reduce health inequities [47] . First, health conditions directly have positive impacts on good health status in the Medicaid gap. Thanks to an OR value beyond 1, after the adjustment of the ACA, the Medicaid gap is bound to enter the Medicaid group so that some who do not have insurance could participate in the free insurance coverage system, saving more lives and reliving more suffering. Second, demographic impacts focus on beyond 55-aged elders who will have a decreased possibility of health risks after the adjustment. Third, education impacts are negatively related to HS, the adjustment will assist people who have not finished their high school degree in the Medicaid gap to have more opportunities to access the Medicaid system and reduce health risks. In addition, marital status has a negative influence on HS. Texas participating in the ACA program will benefit a single person in the Medicaid group, especially single women, to improve health care conditions and obtain more chances to access the Medicaid program. In order to further acknowledge ACA impacts on the Texas healthcare system, we selected one state with the implementation of ACA, California, as a reference to compare the discrepancy of ACA impacts. Three main impacts should be noticed. First, California's uninsured rate decreased 10%, and has remained at 7% until now. Since January 2021, the ACA in California has provided integrated health coverage to around one-third of Californians. Estimated 1.2-1.6 million people in California each year have been enjoyed healthcare benefits from the implementation of ACA every single year. (https://www. ppic.org/publication/health-care-reform-in-california/, accessed on 11 September 2021). Second, the implementation of ACA declined self-reported incapability to afford medical care and out-of-pocket spending, especially for low-income persons [48] . Lastly, the ACA implementation is associated with a reduction in financial risk and racial disparities [49] . Beyond the statistical significance of the Medicaid gap, we are further aware that the deep root of the decline of the Medicaid expansion is not just about financial limits, but also about the political contest. We called it the "Politics of Medicaid", which means democratic states asserting Medicaid importance while republic states are holding Medicaid cuts [50] . When standing at marginal in a polity, the Medicaid gap has to stop to think about how policy and political vulnerability [51] . Indeed, the deep root relies on federalism. Medicaid is the epitome of how federalism produces inequity by constructing geographical disparity in access to vital healthcare resources [52] . As a boon, Medicaid is a program that saves thousands of lives each year and rendered tens of millions of Americans with free security of health insurance [53] . Geographical inequities between beneficiaries and the Medicaid gap are the product of policy choices made possible by federalism. Even though federalism is not good inherently, it is inevitable to see that federalism triggers mechanism injustice among economically and racially marginalized Americans and shapes the political effects of the Medicaid policy. Under the diversity of organizations in the healthcare system that exists in the world, Chinese healthcare system is more impressive than others. China has implemented a series of healthy campaigns to elevate the entire healthcare industry to international standards with global impacts, such as the Joint Commission International (JCI) and Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS). Those policies have been facilitated the comprehensive improvement of people's health status and wellbeing [54] so that public healthcare coverage has been implemented to meet the requirement of universal access to basic care [55] . Although the Medicaid gap is marginal in the U.S, we sufficiently use quantitative methods to health access for Medicaid gap. Even though Medicaid is a political issue, this research is useful to local government, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to estimate the Medicaid program implementation consequences by describing how their efforts in the long term can serve towards the improvement of health and socio-economic outcomes [56] . This research has several limitations due to the healthcare statistic. First, based on the BRFSS dataset, this study has inevitable misclassifications when sorting out data. Medicaid samples are higher than the other two groups. A balanced number of samples will increase the accuracy of the analysis of the Medicaid gap. On the other hand, misclassifications are hidden in the standard of Medicaid. The FTP is defined as annual income between USD 20,000-21,404 in Texas. Due to the dynamic Texas FPG criteria, representative samples are divided into eight income categories. There are USD 1404 statistical errors in annual household income. In addition, one index covers many variables, such as multiple chronic conditions. Unmatched variable names may lead to missing data, affecting exact statistical results. Lastly, there are missing data in three variables in the statistic period. Variables missing may lead to the estimate value not being accurate. Based on conventional LA, the PCA-LA health access research for the Medicaid gap added PCA to eliminate multicollinearity disruption, emulated disparity of the Medicaid gap in Texas, visualized the domain concerns of healthcare, education, economic, and demographic impacts. Hence, it provides powerful evidence to improve the Medicaid program. The expansion of Medicaid, simultaneously, may result in both safer health behavior and outcomes for the Medicaid gap. Furthermore, the research quantified the contribution of government and the public sector, the roles of markets and the private sector, and the overlap of the public and private sector work [57] . Hence, assessing access to health services for the Medicaid gap could have a positive impact on the future health care of Texas. It also lays the groundwork for recognizing all the dimensions and complexities of healthcare access in Texas [58, 59] . Healthcare System Access: Measurement, Inference, and Intervention The Affordable Care Act, the Medicaid Coverage Gap, and Hispanic Consumers: A Phenomenology of Obamacare Healthcare in the United States: Clinical, Financial, and Operational Dimensions Analysis: Healthcare Should Be a Right, but the U.S. Doesn't Have a System Politics, Pandemic, and Racial Justice through the Lens of Medicaid Medicine's dilemmas: Infinite needs versus finite resources Medicaid: State and Federal Actions Have Been Taken to Improve Children's Access to Dental Services, but Gaps Remain: Report to Congressional Requesters Medicaid and Insurance Exchanges: Additional Federal Controls Needed to Minimize the Potential for Gaps and Duplication in Coverage: Report to Congressional Requesters; United States Government Accountability Office Eliminating Gaps in Medicaid Coverage during Reentry after Incarceration Health Status and Access to Care for the North Carolina Medicaid Gap Population The Affordable Care Act: Examining the Facts Government Printing Office. The Affordable Care Act: The Impact of Health Insurance Reform on Health Care Consumers: Hearing of the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Government Printing Office Leaving 2 Million People in Limbo. All Things Consid. NPR 2021 Medicaid's Role in Health Reform and Closing the Coverage Gap Geographic Health Disparities: Satellite clinics for cancer care in rural communities An implementation of subsidy prediction system using machine learning logistical regression algorithm Application of modified logistic regression model in the analysis of epidemiology SPSS and SAS programs for comparing Pearson correlations and OLS regression coefficients Development of a Composite Model of Quality of Life: A Case Study in Austin Geographic differences in maternal and child health care utilization in four Ethiopian regions; a cross-sectional study Healthcare fragmentation and cardiovascular risk control among older cancer survivors in the Reasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study An examination of geographic differences in social determinants of health among women with diagnosed HIV in the United States and Puerto Rico Fazlul, I. The three-year impact of the Affordable Care Act on disparities in insurance coverage Potential adult Medicaid beneficiaries under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act compared with current adult Medicaid beneficiaries Are Medicaid Coverage Gaps Associated with Higher Health Care Resource Utilization and Costs in Patients with Schizophrenia? Beneficiary Groups Oppose Verifying Income of Those in Medicaid Gap Closing the Medicaid Coverage Gap: Options for Reform. Health Aff Federal Oversight of Payments and Program Integrity Needs Improvement: Testimony before the Subcommittees on Health Care, District of Columbia, Census and the National Archives and Regulatory Affairs, Stimulus Oversight and Government Spending, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Accountability Office Patient access to chronic medications during the Covid-19 pandemic: Evidence from a comprehensive dataset of US insurance claims The goldilocks dilemma: Impacts of multicollinearity-A comparison of simple linear regression, multiple regression, and ordered variable regression models Addressing state space multicollinearity in solving an ozone pollution dynamic control problem Examining the impact of multicollinearity in discovering higher-order factor models Industrial air pollution and low birth weight: A case-control study in Texas, USA Within-gap position shapes fifty years of forest dynamics in a temperate hardwood forest in Connecticut Autism spectrum disorders, endocrine disrupting compounds, and heavy metals in amniotic fluid: A case-control study Donation after circulatory death (DCD) and liver transplantation: A cohort study Prediction of hot spot areas of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in Hunan Province based on an information quantity model and logistical regression model Comparison of dimension reduction-based logistic regression models for case-control genome-wide association study: Principal components analysis vs. partial least squares Multiple metal concentrations and gestational diabetes mellitus in Taiyuan Cluster Analysis of Antinuclear Autoantibodies in the Prognosis of SLE Nephropathy: Are Anti-Extractable Nuclear Antibodies Protective? Lupus Odum Institute for Research in Social Science Learn about Single Mean t-Test in SPSS with Data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (2015)/Feng Shi Statistik für Human-und Sozialwissenschaftler Interpersonal problems of people who describe themselves as lonely The association between perceived social and physical environment and mental health among older adults: Mediating effects of loneliness Collinearity diagnostics of binary logistic regression model Guide to Clinical Preventive Services: Periodic Updates The Cost of Interventions to Increase Influenza Vaccination: A Systematic Review Cost-benefit analysis of a strategy to vaccinate healthy working adults against influenza Out-of-Pocket Spending and Premium Contributions after Implementation of the Affordable Care Act Catastrophic expenditures in California trauma patients after the Affordable Care Act: Reduced financial risk and racial disparities Fragmented Democracy: Medicaid, Federalism, and Unequal Politics Social Construction of Target Populations: Implications for Politics and Policy Mortality and access to care among adults after state Medicaid expansions Entitlement Spending Sustainable? Risk Manag Healthcare Reform in China: From Violence to Digital Healthcare Healthcare Quality and HIT: International Standards, China Practices Evaluation of the public health achievements made by projects supported by a federal contract mechanism at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), USA. Eval Financing Universal Access to Healthcare: A Comparative Review of Landmark Legislative Health Reforms in the OECD Assessing healthcare access using the Levesque's conceptual framework-A scoping review Acknowledgments: I would like to extend my sincere gratitude to my teacher, F. Benjamin Zhan, for his instructive advice and useful suggestions on this paper. I am also deeply grateful for his help in the administrative and technical support of this research. Authors declare no conflict of interest. Author Contributions: Conceptualization and methodology, X.W.; investigation, resources, and data curation, X.W.; writing-original draft preparation, X.W.; writing-review and editing, X.W., J.Z.; supervision and project administration, J.Z. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript. Institutional Review Board Statement: Not applicable for studies not involving humans or animals. Data Availability Statement: All data, models, and code generated or used during the study appear in the submitted article.