generic speaker image
Eric  Seiber - The Ohio State University. Columbus, OH, US

Eric Seiber

Associate Professor I Health Services Management and Policy | The Ohio State University

Columbus, OH, UNITED STATES

Dr. Seiber’s research interests focus on health care financing for vulnerable populations.

Social

Biography

Dr. Seiber’s research interests focus on health care financing for vulnerable populations. Specifically, what is the role of health insurance and coverage enrollment barriers on cancer prevention service utilization. His active cancer collaborations examine access to care for Appalachian populations and his current research examines geographic disparities in treatment times for newly diagnosed patients. Previous work has examined the cost effectiveness of cancer related interventions.

Industry Expertise (2)

Education/Learning

Research

Areas of Expertise (7)

Public Health

Data Analysis

Stroke

Depression

Health Care Financing for Vulnerable Populations

Health Disparities

Cancer Related Interventions

Education (2)

Tulane University: Ph.D., Economics 1999

Eckerd College: B.S., Physics and International Studies 1994

Media Appearances (5)

Trumpcare’s Cuts Would Hit White Male Addicts Harder

Daily Beast  online

2017-05-09

“I am not saying my illness is totally responsible for my drug addiction,” Jones said, “but I know that when I started on opiates it was to address the pain I was dealing with from Crohn’s. But I get the treatment now with Medicaid, and if I wasn’t getting the medical treatment now, I’d have a hard time staying sober.” Experts say Jones is among those who will be hardest hit by the Medicaid cuts Republicans want to impose on the country. A study by Eric Seiber, a professor at the College of Public Health at Ohio State University, found those receiving drug-addiction treatment through Medicaid in Ohio, Kentucky, and West Virginia are disproportionately white, middle-aged, male, and with a high school diploma or less education. In other words, Trump supporters.

view more

Nearly all Ohio Medicaid expansion enrollees would lose coverage if program is repealed

Modern Healthcare  online

2017-04-25

About 95% of Medicaid expansion beneficiaries in Ohio would have no insurance option available if repealing the Affordable Care Act eliminates Medicaid expansion, according to a new study. The report, published in the American Journal of Public Health, found the overwhelming majority of newly enrolled Medicaid members in the state qualified because they didn't have private health insurance, lost their private insurance due to unemployment, or weren't eligible for their employer's health plan. "Many of these people have nothing else to turn to," said Eric Seiber, lead author and associate professor of health services management and policy at Ohio State University, in a statement. "Their choice is Medicaid or medical bankruptcy."

view more

HHS: Donald Trump's election won't derail Obamacare enrollment for 2017

UPI.com  online

2016-11-11

"Insurance sold now is a contract valid for a full year, so anyone who buys now will have coverage next year," noted Eric Seiber. He is an associate professor of health services management and policy at Ohio State University.

view more

Sharp Rise in Obamacare Premiums for 2017

U.S. News & World Report  online

2016-10-26

"The marketplace was an experiment, and it doesn't seem to be working," said Eric Seiber, associate professor of health services management and policy at Ohio State University.

view more

Does expanding Medicaid 'worsen health care options'? We take a second look

PolitiFact  online

2013-04-11

"If very few of my low income workers are eligible" for Medicaid after the program is expanded, "then why would I close the plan?" said Eric Seiber, an assistant professor of health services management and policy at Ohio State University and co-author of a paper on crowding out in Ohio.

view more

Recent Research (2)

Most new to Medicaid have no other option if Affordable Care Act repealed

The Ohio State University

2017-04-24

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Almost everyone covered through Ohio’s Medicaid expansion would have no other viable insurance option should the Affordable Care Act be repealed, a new study has found. Law and public health researchers from The Ohio State University determined that 95 percent of newly enrolled beneficiaries would be without a plausible pathway to coverage. The research appears online in the American Journal of Public Health. “Many of these people have nothing else to turn to,” said Eric Seiber, lead author and associate professor of health services management and policy in Ohio State’s College of Public Health.

view more

Study: Companies Pay Almost $6,000 Extra Per Year for Each Employee Who Smokes

The Ohio State University

2013-06-03

A new study suggests that U.S. businesses pay almost $6,000 per year extra for each employee who smokes compared to the cost to employ a person who has never smoked cigarettes. Researchers say the study is the first to take a comprehensive look at the financial burden for companies that employ smokers...

view more