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Medical Expenditure Panel Survey

The Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) is a family of surveys intended to provide nationally representative estimates of health expenditure, utilization, payment sources, health status, and health insurance coverage among the noninstitutionalized, nonmilitary population of the United States. This series of government-produced data sets can be used to examine how individuals interact with the medical care system in the United States.

MEPS is administered by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) in three components: the core Household Component, the Insurance/Employer Component, and the Medical Provider Component. Only the Household Component is available for download on the Internet. These components provide comprehensive national estimates of health care use and payment by individuals, families, and any other demographic group of interested

.[1]

History edit

MEPS was modeled after the National Medical Expenditure Survey (NMES) and the National Medical Care Utilization and Expenditure Survey (NMCUES), which were conducted in 1977 (NMES-1), 1980 (NMCUES), and 1987 (NMES-2). Each of these surveys was tasked with providing data on a representative sample of Americans' interaction with the medical care system. Although the NMES and NMCUES were sampled independently from the U.S. population, each new MEPS sample is drawn from the outgoing National Health Interview Survey panel.[2][3] MEPS is generally considered the direct descendant of these surveys, and prestigious peer-reviewed journals commonly publish articles that examine trends calculated between MEPS and its predecessors.[4][5]

Research topics edit

The Medical Expenditure Panel Survey can be used for a wide range of topics related to the U.S. healthcare system, including Access to Care, Children's Health, Chronic Conditions, Health Insurance, Health Disparities, Women's Health, Prescription Drugs, Individuals with Disabilities, and the Elderly. AHRQ continually produces chartbooks, statistical briefs, and fact sheets using MEPS data which shed light on these various facets of how the American healthcare system functions, what patients experience, how they behave, and who pays for the cost of care.[6]

Data accessibility edit

The MEPSnet Query Tools interactive table builder allows non-statisticians to select a data year and medical variable(s) of interest, and produce descriptive statistics and crosstabulations of Household Component and Insurance Component data from the AHRQ website.

Data available edit

The current[when?] publicly available Medical Expenditure Panel Survey – Household Component data set consists of six files which describe the demographics and characteristics of the survey population and eight event-level files which capture all interactions with the U.S. medical system.[7]

Household Component Full-Year Files edit

The six full-year files include:

  • The Full-Year Consolidated Data files (released annually in November) – The main person-level file of the Household Component data set, which includes all demographic and medical characteristics, as well as patient-reported responses to the main survey questions. Since the survey involves five interview rounds over the two-year panel, data from interview rounds 1, 2, and 3 are included for individuals in their first of two years, and data from interview rounds 3, 4, and 5 are included for individuals in their second of two years. These single-year consolidated datafiles can be thought of as the first half of one two-year panel survey stacked on top of the second half of another two-year panel survey.[8]
  • The Full-Year Population Characteristics files (released annually in May) – A skeleton version of the person-level consolidated file, which gets released six months before the Consolidated file of the same year but does not include any income or medical expenditure variables.[9]
  • The Medical Conditions files (released annually in November) – The medical condition-level file, which can be linked to both the person-level files and the event-level files. Unlike the medical event-level files, which describe a solitary encounter with the U.S. healthcare system, records within the Medical Conditions files contain a distinct ICD-9 code, Clinical Classification Code, and describe only one ailment (illness or injury). In order to view all medical events during the calendar year associated with a particular condition, a many-to-one join can be executed between this file and zero, one, or more of the event-level files' records (on CONDIDX). The medical condition records in this file can also be merged with a many-to-one join to the person-level files (on DUPERSID), where each person may have zero, one, or multiple matching condition records.[10]
  • The Jobs files (released annually in May) – The jobs-level data file contains information about each job that each MEPS-HC survey respondent held over the course of the calendar year, including wages, hours, industry, and occupation, as well as various healthcare-related survey questions (such as offers of employer-sponsored insurance, sick day availability, etc.). This file can be merged with the full-year *person-level file (on DUPERSID), with one match per unique job an individual held during the calendar year. It can also be merged with the Person Round Plan file, matching (on JOBSIDX) wherever a private health insurance plan was obtained through a place of employment.[11]
  • The Person Round Plan (PRPL) files (released annually in October) – This health insurance plan by interview date file contains information about each private insurance plan covering each individual surveyed, with one record per interview date (three annually). Private health insurance plans include physician/hospital, dental, vision, medigap, and prescription drugs. This file contains health insurance-specific information, such as an edited monthly out-of-pocket insurance premium, source of coverage and premium payment, as well as some questions about the plan holder's satisfaction with the plan. Although this file can be merged with both person-level files (on DUPERSID) and the Jobs files (on JOBSIDX), this file contains one record per person, per plan, per interview and therefore does not easily condense into one-to-one merges. As an analytic shortcut, data users might simply limit this data set to each unique person-plan's first interview record of the year; the first interview number (RN) available for each distinct establishment identifier and policyholder identifier combination (ESTBIDX + PHLDRIDX).[12]
  • The Longitudinal Weight files (released annually in December) – This person-level file mirrors the main Consolidated files in terms of contents, except that it contains survey responses for all five rounds and therefore contains half as many observations. The two-year, five-interview survey data aggregated into this file is designed to be representative of two years' worth of medical behavior of the U.S. noninstitutionalized population over the period specified.[13]

Household Component Event Files edit

The eight event-level files generally contain one record per event, and contain various information pertaining to the specific type of event. Each record contains one or more ICD-9 codes to describe and categorize the type of medical encounter experienced by the surveyed individual. The event-level files also contain the breakdown of spending by payor associated with the event and a date (or start and end dates) that the event took place. Each of these event files can be joined with the person-level files in a many-to-one match (on DUPERSID), where an individual with zero medical events during the calendar year would generate zero matches, but an individual with two doctor visits and a dental visit would generate three matches across all of the event files. The event-level files can also be joined with the condition files (on CONDIDX) to determine what medical expenditure can be associated with particular conditions. The eight files include:

  • The Prescribed Medicines files (released annually in October) – This file contains one household-reported prescribed medicine purchase during the calendar year. Prescription purchases are then verified by the prescribing pharmacy. In addition to the expenditure information, this file contains characteristics of the medication, such as the National Drug Code (NDC) identifier, the drug name, and the Multum Lexicon category. Prescribed medical events may be more difficult to analyze, since the strength of the drug and quantity purchased may vary, despite two separate prescription-events being the same chemical substance. Prescribed medical events may also be more difficult to analyze, since, unlike other recorded medical events, a pharmacy encounter does not guarantee that the medication has been administered (i.e. that the patient stuck to his or her drug regiment). This file should be thought of as containing one record per pharmacy encounter.[14]
  • The Dental Visits files (released annually in August) – The file contains one record for each dental visit during the calendar year. It includes dental-specific information such as the type of provider seen, if the visit was due to an accident, reason for the dental event, and any medication was prescribed.[15]
  • The Other Medical Expenses files (released annually in August) – This file contains one record for each medical expense that does not fit into any of the other event type categories. The events and expenditures captured in this file are overwhelmingly recorded as Glasses and Contact Lenses, with Durable Medical Equipment (such as Orthopedic items, Prostheses, Hearing Devices) also included.[16]
  • The Hospital Inpatient Stays files (released annually in October) – This file contains hospitalization-specific information including the date of and reason for the stay, the types of services received, and any procedure(s) undertaken during the hospital inpatient stay.[17]
  • The Emergency Room Visits files (released annually in September) – This file contains emergency room-specific information including the date of and reason for the visit, the types of services received, and any procedures(s) undertaken during the visit. Since many E.R. visits continue into Inpatient Hospital admissions, the spending incurred during any E.R. visit resulting in an Inpatient Hospital Admission gets transferred to the Hospital Inpatient Stays event file (identifiable using the ERHEVIDX variable) and the medical expenditure cannot be divided out between pre- and post-admission.[18]
  • The Outpatient Visits files (released annually in September) – This file contains information about each visit to an outpatient hospital setting, including type of test or treatment being provided, whether or not a physician was seen (and if so what specialty), and what condition or diagnosis the visit was related to.[19]
  • The Office-based Visits files (released annually in September) – This file captures each office-based encounter of all sampled individuals. This file contains all necessary descriptive information about visits to Primary Care Physicians, specialist physicians, and non-physician medical providers (such as Nurse Practitioners and Physical Therapists) that occurred outside of a hospital setting. In addition to the general event visit information, this file includes certain details about any preventive services, tests, and vaccinations received.[20]
  • The Home Health Visits files (released annually in August) – This file contains one record for each time that a certified home health medical practitioner visits a sampled individual. In addition to the standard event file variables, this file contains information about the home health medical provider's credentials and skills, the length of the visit, and the type(s) of care received. This file includes medical visits by hospice providers, which are generally paid for home-based care through the Medicare Hospice benefit.[21][22]

Publications edit

The Medical Expenditure Panel Survey is commonly the subject of analysis in articles on health policy and health services in research journals such as Health Affairs, JAMA, Health Services Research, and the New England Journal of Medicine.[23]

Methodology edit

Noninstitutionalized civilian Americans (both citizens and non-citizens) are sampled at the household, allowing for analyses of medical behavior at the family-level as well as the individual-level. Each year, households containing a total of approximately 15,000 individuals are sub-sampled from the National Health Interview Survey's two year panel. These individuals are then followed with five in-person interviews (rounds) over the course of two years during which a complete demographic profile is collected, all medical encounters are documented, and patient-reported subjective questions regarding topics like satisfaction with care are obtained.[24]

MEPS employs a complex survey sample design in order to oversample certain population groups of interest; this survey design must be accounted for (using either the Taylor Series Linearization method or the Balanced repeated replication method) to appropriately calculate the standard errors.[25]

References edit

  1. ^ "Data on Health and Well-being of American Indians, Alaska Natives, and Other Native Americans | ASPE". Aspe.hhs.gov. 30 November 2006. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  2. ^ "Summary of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS)". Archived from the original on 2001-11-22. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2017-09-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ Druss, B. G.; Marcus, S. C.; Olfson, M.; Tanielian, T.; Pincus, H. A. (2003). "Trends in Care by Nonphysician Clinicians in the United States". New England Journal of Medicine. 348 (2): 130–137. doi:10.1056/NEJMsa020993. PMID 12519924.
  5. ^ Olfson, M.; Marcus, S. C.; Druss, B.; Elinson, L.; Tanielian, T.; Pincus, H. A. (2002). "National Trends in the Outpatient Treatment of Depression". JAMA. 287 (2): 203–209. doi:10.1001/jama.287.2.203. PMID 11779262.
  6. ^ "Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Topics". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2009-10-05. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  7. ^ "Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Download Data Files". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2017-05-31. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  8. ^ "Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Public Use File Details". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2006-01-08. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  9. ^ "Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Public Use File Details". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2006-01-08. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  10. ^ "MEPS HC-112: 2007 Medical Conditions". Meps.ahrq.gov. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  11. ^ "HC-108: MEPS 2007 Jobs File". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2007-12-31. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  12. ^ "MEPS HC-111: 2007 Person Round Plan Public Use File". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2007-01-01. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  13. ^ "MEPS HC-114: MEPS Panel 11 Longitudinal Data File". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2006-01-01. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  14. ^ "MEPS HC-110A: 2007 Prescribed Medicines". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2007-12-31. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  15. ^ "MEPS HC-110B: 2007 Dental Visits". Meps.ahrq.gov. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  16. ^ "Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Public Use File Details". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2006-01-08. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  17. ^ "MEPS HC-110D: 2007 Hospital Inpatient Stays". Meps.ahrq.gov. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  18. ^ "MEPS HC-110E: 2007 Emergency Room Visits". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2007-12-31. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  19. ^ "MEPS HC-110F: 2007 Outpatient Department Visits". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2007-12-31. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  20. ^ "MEPS HC-110G: 2007 Office-Based Medical Provider Visits". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2007-12-31. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  21. ^ "MEPS HC-110H: 2007 Home Health Visits". Meps.ahrq.gov. 2007-12-31. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  22. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-05-27. Retrieved 2010-05-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  23. ^ ""Medical Expenditure Panel Survey" AND (JAMA OR "Health Affairs" OR NEJM OR "Health Services Research") – Google Scholar". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  24. ^ "Methodology Report #1: Design and Methods of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component". Meps.ahrq.gov. Retrieved 2017-07-07.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-08-13. Retrieved 2010-05-22.

External links edit

  • Medical Expenditure Panel Survey website

medical, expenditure, panel, survey, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Medical Expenditure Panel Survey news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Medical Expenditure Panel Survey MEPS is a family of surveys intended to provide nationally representative estimates of health expenditure utilization payment sources health status and health insurance coverage among the noninstitutionalized nonmilitary population of the United States This series of government produced data sets can be used to examine how individuals interact with the medical care system in the United States MEPS is administered by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality AHRQ in three components the core Household Component the Insurance Employer Component and the Medical Provider Component Only the Household Component is available for download on the Internet These components provide comprehensive national estimates of health care use and payment by individuals families and any other demographic group of interested 1 Contents 1 History 2 Research topics 3 Data accessibility 4 Data available 4 1 Household Component Full Year Files 4 2 Household Component Event Files 5 Publications 6 Methodology 7 References 8 External linksHistory editMEPS was modeled after the National Medical Expenditure Survey NMES and the National Medical Care Utilization and Expenditure Survey NMCUES which were conducted in 1977 NMES 1 1980 NMCUES and 1987 NMES 2 Each of these surveys was tasked with providing data on a representative sample of Americans interaction with the medical care system Although the NMES and NMCUES were sampled independently from the U S population each new MEPS sample is drawn from the outgoing National Health Interview Survey panel 2 3 MEPS is generally considered the direct descendant of these surveys and prestigious peer reviewed journals commonly publish articles that examine trends calculated between MEPS and its predecessors 4 5 Research topics editThe Medical Expenditure Panel Survey can be used for a wide range of topics related to the U S healthcare system including Access to Care Children s Health Chronic Conditions Health Insurance Health Disparities Women s Health Prescription Drugs Individuals with Disabilities and the Elderly AHRQ continually produces chartbooks statistical briefs and fact sheets using MEPS data which shed light on these various facets of how the American healthcare system functions what patients experience how they behave and who pays for the cost of care 6 Data accessibility editThe MEPSnet Query Tools interactive table builder allows non statisticians to select a data year and medical variable s of interest and produce descriptive statistics and crosstabulations of Household Component and Insurance Component data from the AHRQ website Data available editThe current when publicly available Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component data set consists of six files which describe the demographics and characteristics of the survey population and eight event level files which capture all interactions with the U S medical system 7 Household Component Full Year Files edit The six full year files include The Full Year Consolidated Data files released annually in November The main person level file of the Household Component data set which includes all demographic and medical characteristics as well as patient reported responses to the main survey questions Since the survey involves five interview rounds over the two year panel data from interview rounds 1 2 and 3 are included for individuals in their first of two years and data from interview rounds 3 4 and 5 are included for individuals in their second of two years These single year consolidated datafiles can be thought of as the first half of one two year panel survey stacked on top of the second half of another two year panel survey 8 The Full Year Population Characteristics files released annually in May A skeleton version of the person level consolidated file which gets released six months before the Consolidated file of the same year but does not include any income or medical expenditure variables 9 The Medical Conditions files released annually in November The medical condition level file which can be linked to both the person level files and the event level files Unlike the medical event level files which describe a solitary encounter with the U S healthcare system records within the Medical Conditions files contain a distinct ICD 9 code Clinical Classification Code and describe only one ailment illness or injury In order to view all medical events during the calendar year associated with a particular condition a many to one join can be executed between this file and zero one or more of the event level files records on CONDIDX The medical condition records in this file can also be merged with a many to one join to the person level files on DUPERSID where each person may have zero one or multiple matching condition records 10 The Jobs files released annually in May The jobs level data file contains information about each job that each MEPS HC survey respondent held over the course of the calendar year including wages hours industry and occupation as well as various healthcare related survey questions such as offers of employer sponsored insurance sick day availability etc This file can be merged with the full year person level file on DUPERSID with one match per unique job an individual held during the calendar year It can also be merged with the Person Round Plan file matching on JOBSIDX wherever a private health insurance plan was obtained through a place of employment 11 The Person Round Plan PRPL files released annually in October This health insurance plan by interview date file contains information about each private insurance plan covering each individual surveyed with one record per interview date three annually Private health insurance plans include physician hospital dental vision medigap and prescription drugs This file contains health insurance specific information such as an edited monthly out of pocket insurance premium source of coverage and premium payment as well as some questions about the plan holder s satisfaction with the plan Although this file can be merged with both person level files on DUPERSID and the Jobs files on JOBSIDX this file contains one record per person per plan per interview and therefore does not easily condense into one to one merges As an analytic shortcut data users might simply limit this data set to each unique person plan s first interview record of the year the first interview number RN available for each distinct establishment identifier and policyholder identifier combination ESTBIDX PHLDRIDX 12 The Longitudinal Weight files released annually in December This person level file mirrors the main Consolidated files in terms of contents except that it contains survey responses for all five rounds and therefore contains half as many observations The two year five interview survey data aggregated into this file is designed to be representative of two years worth of medical behavior of the U S noninstitutionalized population over the period specified 13 Household Component Event Files edit The eight event level files generally contain one record per event and contain various information pertaining to the specific type of event Each record contains one or more ICD 9 codes to describe and categorize the type of medical encounter experienced by the surveyed individual The event level files also contain the breakdown of spending by payor associated with the event and a date or start and end dates that the event took place Each of these event files can be joined with the person level files in a many to one match on DUPERSID where an individual with zero medical events during the calendar year would generate zero matches but an individual with two doctor visits and a dental visit would generate three matches across all of the event files The event level files can also be joined with the condition files on CONDIDX to determine what medical expenditure can be associated with particular conditions The eight files include The Prescribed Medicines files released annually in October This file contains one household reported prescribed medicine purchase during the calendar year Prescription purchases are then verified by the prescribing pharmacy In addition to the expenditure information this file contains characteristics of the medication such as the National Drug Code NDC identifier the drug name and the Multum Lexicon category Prescribed medical events may be more difficult to analyze since the strength of the drug and quantity purchased may vary despite two separate prescription events being the same chemical substance Prescribed medical events may also be more difficult to analyze since unlike other recorded medical events a pharmacy encounter does not guarantee that the medication has been administered i e that the patient stuck to his or her drug regiment This file should be thought of as containing one record per pharmacy encounter 14 The Dental Visits files released annually in August The file contains one record for each dental visit during the calendar year It includes dental specific information such as the type of provider seen if the visit was due to an accident reason for the dental event and any medication was prescribed 15 The Other Medical Expenses files released annually in August This file contains one record for each medical expense that does not fit into any of the other event type categories The events and expenditures captured in this file are overwhelmingly recorded as Glasses and Contact Lenses with Durable Medical Equipment such as Orthopedic items Prostheses Hearing Devices also included 16 The Hospital Inpatient Stays files released annually in October This file contains hospitalization specific information including the date of and reason for the stay the types of services received and any procedure s undertaken during the hospital inpatient stay 17 The Emergency Room Visits files released annually in September This file contains emergency room specific information including the date of and reason for the visit the types of services received and any procedures s undertaken during the visit Since many E R visits continue into Inpatient Hospital admissions the spending incurred during any E R visit resulting in an Inpatient Hospital Admission gets transferred to the Hospital Inpatient Stays event file identifiable using the ERHEVIDX variable and the medical expenditure cannot be divided out between pre and post admission 18 The Outpatient Visits files released annually in September This file contains information about each visit to an outpatient hospital setting including type of test or treatment being provided whether or not a physician was seen and if so what specialty and what condition or diagnosis the visit was related to 19 The Office based Visits files released annually in September This file captures each office based encounter of all sampled individuals This file contains all necessary descriptive information about visits to Primary Care Physicians specialist physicians and non physician medical providers such as Nurse Practitioners and Physical Therapists that occurred outside of a hospital setting In addition to the general event visit information this file includes certain details about any preventive services tests and vaccinations received 20 The Home Health Visits files released annually in August This file contains one record for each time that a certified home health medical practitioner visits a sampled individual In addition to the standard event file variables this file contains information about the home health medical provider s credentials and skills the length of the visit and the type s of care received This file includes medical visits by hospice providers which are generally paid for home based care through the Medicare Hospice benefit 21 22 Publications editThe Medical Expenditure Panel Survey is commonly the subject of analysis in articles on health policy and health services in research journals such as Health Affairs JAMA Health Services Research and the New England Journal of Medicine 23 Methodology editNoninstitutionalized civilian Americans both citizens and non citizens are sampled at the household allowing for analyses of medical behavior at the family level as well as the individual level Each year households containing a total of approximately 15 000 individuals are sub sampled from the National Health Interview Survey s two year panel These individuals are then followed with five in person interviews rounds over the course of two years during which a complete demographic profile is collected all medical encounters are documented and patient reported subjective questions regarding topics like satisfaction with care are obtained 24 MEPS employs a complex survey sample design in order to oversample certain population groups of interest this survey design must be accounted for using either the Taylor Series Linearization method or the Balanced repeated replication method to appropriately calculate the standard errors 25 References edit Data on Health and Well being of American Indians Alaska Natives and Other Native Americans ASPE Aspe hhs gov 30 November 2006 Retrieved 2017 07 07 Summary of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey MEPS Archived from the original on 2001 11 22 Retrieved 2010 05 22 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2017 09 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Druss B G Marcus S C Olfson M Tanielian T Pincus H A 2003 Trends in Care by Nonphysician Clinicians in the United States New England Journal of Medicine 348 2 130 137 doi 10 1056 NEJMsa020993 PMID 12519924 Olfson M Marcus S C Druss B Elinson L Tanielian T Pincus H A 2002 National Trends in the Outpatient Treatment of Depression JAMA 287 2 203 209 doi 10 1001 jama 287 2 203 PMID 11779262 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Topics Meps ahrq gov 2009 10 05 Retrieved 2017 07 07 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Download Data Files Meps ahrq gov 2017 05 31 Retrieved 2017 07 07 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Public Use File Details Meps ahrq gov 2006 01 08 Retrieved 2017 07 07 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Public Use File Details Meps ahrq gov 2006 01 08 Retrieved 2017 07 07 MEPS HC 112 2007 Medical Conditions Meps ahrq gov Retrieved 2017 07 07 HC 108 MEPS 2007 Jobs File Meps ahrq gov 2007 12 31 Retrieved 2017 07 07 MEPS HC 111 2007 Person Round Plan Public Use File Meps ahrq gov 2007 01 01 Retrieved 2017 07 07 MEPS HC 114 MEPS Panel 11 Longitudinal Data File Meps ahrq gov 2006 01 01 Retrieved 2017 07 07 MEPS HC 110A 2007 Prescribed Medicines Meps ahrq gov 2007 12 31 Retrieved 2017 07 07 MEPS HC 110B 2007 Dental Visits Meps ahrq gov Retrieved 2017 07 07 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Public Use File Details Meps ahrq gov 2006 01 08 Retrieved 2017 07 07 MEPS HC 110D 2007 Hospital Inpatient Stays Meps ahrq gov Retrieved 2017 07 07 MEPS HC 110E 2007 Emergency Room Visits Meps ahrq gov 2007 12 31 Retrieved 2017 07 07 MEPS HC 110F 2007 Outpatient Department Visits Meps ahrq gov 2007 12 31 Retrieved 2017 07 07 MEPS HC 110G 2007 Office Based Medical Provider Visits Meps ahrq gov 2007 12 31 Retrieved 2017 07 07 MEPS HC 110H 2007 Home Health Visits Meps ahrq gov 2007 12 31 Retrieved 2017 07 07 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2010 05 27 Retrieved 2010 05 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Medical Expenditure Panel Survey AND JAMA OR Health Affairs OR NEJM OR Health Services Research Google Scholar scholar google com Retrieved 5 July 2017 Methodology Report 1 Design and Methods of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component Meps ahrq gov Retrieved 2017 07 07 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Computing Standard Errors for MEPS Estimates Archived from the original on 2009 08 13 Retrieved 2010 05 22 External links editMedical Expenditure Panel Survey website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Medical Expenditure Panel Survey amp oldid 1216423054, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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