The Uninsured Patient

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "The Uninsured Patient"

Transcription

1 The American Journal of Medicine (2006) 119, 166.e1-166.e5 COMMENTARY The Uninsured Patient Despite recent attempts by federal programs to increase access to medical care for uninsured persons, the number of Americans without insurance has increased since 1994 by an average of one million per year, and 2.4 million in By 2002, 43 million Americans were uninsured, comprising 17.3% of the nonelderly population (Kaiser unpublished data, February 2000). Even this number may underestimate the extent of the problem; recent data from the Kaiser Commission found that approximately 30% of Americans, more than 70 million people, lacked health care for at least 1 month over a 3-year period (Kaiser unpublished data, February 2000). 1 Many Americans have lost coverage throughout the past decade because of the increasing cost of health insurance, which has resulted in larger costs to individuals for premiums and co-pays, and decreased availability of employer-based health insurance. 1 For example, in a study by Cooper et al. 2 in 1997, two-thirds of those without employer-based insurance cited the high cost of health insurance plans as the main reason they were not covered. Similarly, despite the robust economy of the late 1990s, an increasing percentage of companies cited the high cost of health care plans as the main reason they were dropping medical coverage for or shifting costs to their employees (Kaiser Family Foundation/Lehrer Survey About the Uninsured, unpublished data, February 2000). During the past decade, the U.S. Congress has passed regulatory reforms and enacted new programs in an attempt to increase opportunities for Americans to obtain and maintain health insurance coverage. Two incremental reforms in private health insurance regulation, the Consolidated Omnibus Reconciliation Act and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, were legislated to increase opportunities for Americans to maintain their insurance coverage, but these regulations have not stopped the numbers of uninsured Americans from Requests for reprints should be addressed to Baldeep Singh, MD, UCLA Department of General Internal Medicine, 100 Medical Plaza, Suite 455, Los Angeles, CA address: bsingh@mednet.ucla.edu continuing to increase. In the public sector, large increases in Medicaid eligibility over the past two decades, as well as the enactment of the State Children s Health Insurance Program in 1997, were designed to increase eligibility for public programs, but have also failed to decrease the number of uninsured patients in the United States (Kaiser Family Foundation/Lehrer Survey About the Uninsured, unpublished data, February 2000). The uninsured tend to be young, working poor, minority families. They tend to have worse health, and when they do become ill, have worse outcomes. This article identifies important demographic trends among the uninsured and explores the barriers they face in getting and keeping health care coverage. More importantly, these barriers significantly affect health outcomes and reveal a growing divide in health care access that is affecting the nation s health as a whole. COVERAGE BY TYPE OF HEALTH INSURANCE In 2002, the uninsured represented 17.3% of the nonelderly, American population. Because almost everyone 65 years of age or more has Medicare, children and adults aged less than 65 years of age make up the majority of the uninsured. Among insured Americans aged less than 65 years of age, employment-based health insurance covers 63.3%, Medicaid covers 12%, and Medicare covers 2%. 1 There is a common misperception that the Medicaid program provides health coverage for all low-income Americans, when, in fact, its policy toward low-income adults is quite restrictive. Although the program covers many low-income children, there are only a few eligibility pathways for adults, aside from being significantly disabled or pregnant and those that do exist are primarily limited to single parents with very low incomes. Parents working full-time at the minimum wage, for example, are not eligible for Medicaid in the majority of states (Kaiser Family Foundation/Lehrer Survey About the Uninsured, unpublished data, February 2000). Even if one does qualify for Medicaid, strict eligibility makes coverage difficult to keep. At the end of any given year, two-thirds of those who were insured by Medicaid will have lost their coverage. 3 The federal welfare reforms enacted in 1996 have affected the Medicaid enrollment /$ -see front matter 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. doi: /j.amjmed

2 166.e2 The American Journal of Medicine, Vol 119, No 2, February 2006 process and have been associated with decreases in Medicaid coverage. In addition, these reforms have served to increase the number of uninsured because those leaving welfare move into the workforce to take low-wage positions for which health benefits are less likely to be offered or affordable. For individuals who are self-employed, work in small companies, or have opted out of their employer s health insurance plans, the alternative is private, nongroup insurance. However, private, nongroup insurance covers only 5.3% of the population. The major reason there are not more enrollees is the relatively high cost of such plans compared to family income. For example, the maximum income of families at 200% of the 2004 federal poverty level was $ for a family of 4, whereas the full premium for this family averaged more than $7000 per year. Thus for low-income families, comprising twothirds of the uninsured, premiums remain out of reach. 3 Furthermore, workers who have health insurance typically pay one-quarter to one-third of the total cost of family coverage premiums. COVERAGE BY AGE Young adults, 19 to 34 years of age, comprise just a quarter of the nonelderly population, but represent 40% of the uninsured. 1 Young adults are at higher risk of being uninsured because they are less likely to be married and therefore have only themselves as a link to job-based health benefits. They also earn lower incomes on average and are usually not eligible for Medicaid. Three million young adults are uninsured because they decline to purchase available health insurance because of high premiums and co-pays. But, 11 million young workers are uninsured because their employers do not offer health insurance, and they cannot afford to purchase coverage elsewhere. 2 This latter group comprised 75% of the growth in the number of uninsured in recent years (Kaiser unpublished data, February 2000). More than half of the uninsured come from families with children, and 1 in 5 of the uninsured is a child. Thanks to recent expansions in Medicaid and the State Children s Health Insurance Program, the percentage of children who are uninsured has not increased for the last 3 years. Nevertheless, 10 million children less than 18 years of age in the United States do not have medical insurance even though it is estimated that 95% of them are eligible for public insurance. 7 In general, eligible children are more likely to be enrolled in public programs if the rest of the family has coverage. In particular, the insurance status of parents seems to affect whether their children receive care, as well as how much, even if the children have coverage (Kaiser Family Foundation/Lehrer Survey About the Uninsured, unpublished data, February 2000). COVERAGE BY INCOME In 2002, 27% of the uninsured were from families with incomes below the Federal Poverty Level ($ for a family of 3), 39% had family incomes between 100% and 200% of the Federal Poverty Level, and the remaining 36% of the uninsured were from families with higher incomes. This third group represents the fastest growing segment of the uninsured over the past 3 years. 1 Nonetheless, approximately one-third of all members of families living at or below 200% of the Federal Poverty Level, are uninsured, placing an undue burden on this segment of the population as a whole. Workers with lower incomes are offered employmentbased insurance plans much less often than those with middle to upper incomes. Only 55% of workers whose hourly rate is less than $7 are offered health insurance through their own or a family member s job, compared with 96% of workers whose hourly rate is more than $15. 9 COVERAGE BY EMPLOYMENT STATUS It is a myth that most of the uninsured are unemployed. In fact, 80% of uninsured children and adults less than 65 years of age live in working families. Even members of families with two full-time workers have a1in10chance of being uninsured. 3 Only 19% of the uninsured live in families with just part-time workers or no member working outside the home. 1 Nonetheless, members of families without wage earners are much more likely to be uninsured than members of families with wage earners. Low-wage workers have born the brunt of higher premiums and cost sharing. Thirty-two percent of all lowwage families are not offered health insurance by their employers. 10 In fact, rates of employer-sponsored coverage among low-wage workers (making $7/hour) decreased between 1987 and 2000, whereas rates of coverage for high-wage workers actually increased. In fact, 96% of higher-wage workers were offered employerrelated health benefits, and 90% were insured by an employer-sponsored plan. The highest rate of uninsured workers is found among employees in small firms ( 25 workers) or self-employed. Thirty-five percent of workers in small firms are uninsured, compared with only 13% in large firms of 100 employees or more. 1 However, regardless of firm size, the chances of having job-based coverage are less for those with lower incomes, even for those employees who are full-time. Blue-collar workers constitute 63% of the work force in the United States, but they represent 81% of the uninsured. This is because they are less likely than white-collar workers to be offered health insurance as a benefit. 1 When employers do offer insurance plans, the cost of these programs places a disproportionate burden on lowwage workers. The expense of insurance premiums paid by employees tops the list of reasons why uninsured workers decline to take employment-based insurance

3 Singh and Golden Commentary 166.e3 when it is offered. 11 In 1995, the proportion of workers who paid more than 10% of their family income for health care expenditures increased to 33%. 12 COVERAGE BY RACE, ETHNICITY, AND GENDER Although racial minorities formed one-third of the nonelderly population, they comprised more than half of the uninsured. More than one-third of Latinos are uninsured, and a quarter of both African Americans and Native Americans have no health coverage. African Americans are twice as likely and Latinos are 3 times as likely as non-hispanic whites to be uninsured. 13 The differences in health coverage across racial and ethnic groups are only partially explained by differences in income. Two other factors are evident here. Minority groups are less likely, on average, than non-hispanic whites to hold jobs that offer health insurance, and they are less able to afford workplace insurance coverage when it is available. Gender disparities in health coverage are also evident. Adult men are more likely than women to be uninsured. Conversely, women have lower rates of employmentbased coverage. Women are more likely to obtain insurance policies through individual and public programs, usually when they are lower-income and pregnant or with young children. Women with public insurance status, however, tend to have greater instability in their health coverage, providing more opportunities for gaps in coverage. 14 COVERAGE BY COUNTRY OF ORIGIN AND IMMIGRATION STATUS US citizens make up the majority of the uninsured. Although public opinion polls suggest that Americans think most of the uninsured are noncitizens, in fact, noncitizens comprise only 20% of the total uninsured patients. However, this group is at the highest risk (45%) of being uninsured, and immigrant uninsured rates decline with increasing length of residency in the United States. 3,15 Recent immigrants are 3 times as likely as members of the general population to be uninsured, but they only comprise 6% of the total uninsured. Disparities in the uninsured rates between immigrants and native-born US residents reflect the lower rates of employer-based coverage among immigrants, as well as their likelihood of employment in lower-waged positions. 16 Compounding the problem for immigrants, since 1996, federal welfare and immigration reform legislation have banned legal immigrants arriving after 1996 from eligibility for Medicaid, The State Children s Health Insurance Program, and other federal means-tested benefits programs. Except for emergency care, immigrants are not eligible for coverage through these programs during their first 5 years in the United States. 17 COVERAGE BY GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION More than 20% of the nonelderly uninsured population reside in the southwest and south central states, where poverty rates are higher and rates of employer-sponsored coverage are lower than the national average. The amount a state provides in assistance to the uninsured depends on the proportion of families with low incomes, the structure of the state s unemployment benefits, and the inclusiveness of the state s Medicaid programs. A threefold difference exists between the states with the lowest (9%) and highest (27%) rates of uninsured. Reflecting the predominantly urban locations of the general population, most uninsured persons live in urban areas, although rural and urban residents are equally likely to be uninsured. 15 DOES COVERAGE AFFECT MEDICAL OUTCOMES? There is an association among health insurance coverage, access to health care, and patient outcomes. Although 57% of the public reported they believe that those without health insurance are able to get the care they need, one survey found that the uninsured were less than half as likely as those with insurance to receive medical care for a serious medical condition, as judged by physicians. 18 The most important prerequisite for access to care is health insurance coverage. Without it, most people cannot afford medical care. They are more likely to postpone or go without necessary treatment for fear of high medical bills. 19 In fact, uninsured adults are at least four times as likely as the insured to report delaying or foregoing needed health services. Growing evidence from large observational studies reveals the staggering effects of insurance status on general health outcomes. The uninsured poor, for example, are more likely to delay hospitalization compared with those with private health insurance, and when in the hospital, uninsured patients stay longer and experience higher death rates. In addition, hospitalized uninsured patients are 2.3 times more likely than those with insurance to have adverse iatrogenic events. 20,21 Uninsured patients are twice as likely to die over 15 years compared with insured patients (18.4% vs 9.6%); even after adjusting for major health risk factors, mortality remains 25% higher among the uninsured. 22 The effects of poor access to care for the uninsured are particularly striking for diseases which require early detection. The uninsured receive fewer preventive services such as blood pressure checks, mammograms, and screening for colorectal cancer. 2 For example, the loss of Medicaid coverage has been associated with a 10-point increase in diastolic blood pressure and a 15% increase in the hemoglobin A1C in diabetic patients. This has translated into a higher probability of death over 6 months. 21 In addition, because regular preventive care is not received, the uninsured are more likely to be diagnosed at advanced stages of cancer. Greater than 40% of unin-

4 166.e4 The American Journal of Medicine, Vol 119, No 2, February 2006 sured women are more likely to be diagnosed with latestage breast cancer, and 40% to 50% are more likely to die of breast cancer, compared with insured women, depending on their age. 23 In the case of acute care, outcomes are consistently worse for uninsured patients. Among patients with appendicitis, for example, uninsured individuals were 1.5 times more likely than insured patients to present with an appediceal rupture. 24 CONCLUSION The problem of the uninsured in the United States is rapidly becoming a crisis, affecting a broader crosssection of society with each passing year. Growth in the numbers of uninsured Americans has continued annually for over the past decade, and currently more than 17% of the nonelderly population are uninsured. The poor and members of certain minority groups have historically been excluded by a system of voluntary health insurance in the United States. However, contrary to public perception, most Americans without health insurance today are members of working families and are U.S. citizens. The crisis of the uninsured has increasingly become a problem that reaches all racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups, and across a wide spectrum of occupations. Despite recent attempts to improve pediatric insurance coverage, children remain 20% of the total uninsured population. The uninsured are battling both the decreasing affordability and availability of private health insurance, as well as the increasing restrictions on public health insurance programs. Despite an improved economy, obtaining low-cost health care when needed is becoming more difficult for the uninsured. Fewer employers cover their workers because of the increasing cost of health care, and fewer people can afford to pay. The high cost of private insurance plans themselves clearly affects access to medical services in that fewer people can afford health insurance. In addition, the increasing level of out-of-pocket costs for premiums and co-pays reduces usage of health care services. 25,26 Governmental reforms to increase private and public health insurance have made little impact, and in some cases have made the problem worse. Thus, the gap between the increasing cost of health care and the reduced purchasing power of those trying to access health care seems to be the biggest factor in this national crisis. Furthermore, the uninsured are more likely to have poorer health outcomes than those with health insurance. The high cost of care causes many uninsured people to postpone or forego necessary treatment. As a group, the uninsured are having their diseases detected later, and their morbidity and mortality are higher. Whether or not one has health insurance affects job decisions, financial security, access to care, and health status. But lack of insurance and gaps in coverage affect all of society. When an uninsured person goes to a public hospital or clinic, an emergency department, or a private physician for care and cannot pay the full cost, some of the bill is passed on to those who do pay, through higher insurance premiums and in the form of taxes supporting our public medical insurance programs. We all pay for having a large and growing uninsured population. Americans have boasted for years that we have the best health care in the world, but if this is true, it is the case only for those with health insurance. In fact, the clear relationship between insurance status and health outcomes should be considered a national emergency. If access to medical care and health care coverage correlates with improved clinical outcomes, where is the cry from the medical profession to increase both of these? If doctors are entrusted with improving the health care of our patients, we must be at the forefront of moving legislation toward increasing the coverage of all our citizens, thereby increasing the overall health of our nation. 4-6,8 Baldeep Singh, MD UCLA Department of General Internal Medicine Los Angeles, Calif. Rachel Golden, DrPh South Los Angeles Health Projects Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Calif. References 1. Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured; Bennefield R. Dynamic of Economic Well-Being: Health Insurance, 1993 to Who Loses Coverage and for How Long? Census Bureau Current Population Reports. Household Economic Studies, Cooper PF, Schone BS. More offers, fewer takers for employment based health insurance: 1987 and Health Aff (Milwood) 1997; 16(6): Fronstin P. The Economic Cost of the Uninsured: Implications for Business and Government. Employee Benefit Research Institute. 5. Kellerman A. Health policy and clinical practice/health policy report. Ann Emerg Med 2002;40: Gabel J, et al. The Financial Burden of Self Paid Health Insurance on the Poor and Near Poor Broaddus M, et al. Nearly 95 Percent of Low-Income Uninsured Children Now Are Eligible for Medicaid or S-CHIP. Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; Hanson K. Is insurance for children enough? The link between parents and children s health care revisited. Inquiry 1998;35(3): Cooper PF, Schone BS. More offers, fewer takers for employment based health insurance: 1987 and Health Aff (Milwood) 1997; 16(6): Custer??, et al. The Changing Sources of Health Insurance. Health Association of America; Hoffman C, et al. Uninsured in America: A Chart Book. The Kaiser Foundation; Kronick R, Gilmer T. Explaining the decline in health insurance coverage, Health Aff (Milwood). 1999;18(2): Mills R. Health Insurance Coverage, Current Population Reports

5 Singh and Golden Commentary 166.e5 14. Fronstin P. The Economic Cost of the Uninsured: Implications for Business and Government. Employee Benefit Research Institute. 15. Coverage Matters. Insurance and Health Care. Institute of Medicine; Carrasquillo O, Carrasquillo AI, Shea S. Health insurance coverage of immigrants living in the united states: differences by citizenship status and country of origin. Am J Public Health 2000;90(6): Rosenbaum S, et al. Medicaid Eligibility and Citizenship Status: Policy Implications for Immigrant Populations. Policy Brief no Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured; Blendon RJ, Young JT, DesRoches CM. The uninsured, the working uninsured and the public. Health Aff (Milwood) 1999;18(6): Baker D, et al. Regular source of ambulatory care and medical care utilization by patients presenting to a public hospital emergency room. JAMA 271(24): Levit KR, Freeland MS, Waldo DR. Health spending and ability to pay, business, individuals, and government. Health Care Financing Rev 1989;10(3): Berghold LA. Purchasing Power in Health. Piscataway, NJ: Rutgers University Press; DiCarlo S, Gabel J. Conventional health insurance: a decade later. Health Care Financing Rev 1989;10(3): Ayanian JZ, Kohler BA, Abe T, Epstein AM. The relation between health insurance coverage and clinical outcomes among women with breast cancer. N Engl J Med 1993;329(5): Braveman P, Schaaf VM, Egerter S, Bennett T, Schecter W. Insurance-related differences in the risk of ruptured appendix. N Engl J Med 1994;331(7): Zweifel P, et al. Consumer incentives in health care. Handbook of Health Economics. 2000: Wielawski I. Gouging the medically uninsured. A tale of two bills. Health Aff (Milwood) 2000;19(5):

m e d i c a i d Five Facts About the Uninsured

m e d i c a i d Five Facts About the Uninsured kaiser commission o n K E Y F A C T S m e d i c a i d a n d t h e uninsured Five Facts About the Uninsured September 2011 September 2010 The number of non elderly uninsured reached 49.1 million in 2010.

More information

UpDate I. SPECIAL REPORT. How Many Persons Are Uninsured?

UpDate I. SPECIAL REPORT. How Many Persons Are Uninsured? UpDate I. SPECIAL REPORT A Profile Of The Uninsured In America by Diane Rowland, Barbara Lyons, Alina Salganicoff, and Peter Long As the nation debates health care reform and Congress considers the president's

More information

Issue Brief. Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured: Analysis of the March 2007 Current Population Survey. No.

Issue Brief. Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured: Analysis of the March 2007 Current Population Survey. No. Issue Brief Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured: Analysis of the March 2007 Current Population Survey By Paul Fronstin, EBRI No. 310 October 2007 This Issue Brief provides

More information

ACCESS TO CARE FOR THE UNINSURED: AN UPDATE

ACCESS TO CARE FOR THE UNINSURED: AN UPDATE September 2003 ACCESS TO CARE FOR THE UNINSURED: AN UPDATE Over 43 million Americans had no health insurance coverage in 2002 according to the latest estimate from the U.S. Census Bureau - an increase

More information

America s Uninsured Population

America s Uninsured Population STATEMENT OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNAL MEDICINE TO THE COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND MEANS, SUBCOMMITTEE ON HEALTH UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES APRIL 4, 2001 The

More information

Although several factors determine whether and how women use health

Although several factors determine whether and how women use health CHAPTER 3: WOMEN AND HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE Although several factors determine whether and how women use health care services, the importance of health coverage as a critical resource in promoting access

More information

HealthStats HIDI A TWO-PART SERIES ON WOMEN S HEALTH PART ONE: THE IMPORTANCE OF HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE JANUARY 2015

HealthStats HIDI A TWO-PART SERIES ON WOMEN S HEALTH PART ONE: THE IMPORTANCE OF HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE JANUARY 2015 HIDI HealthStats Statistics and Analysis From the Hospital Industry Data Institute Key Points: Uninsured women are often diagnosed with breast and cervical cancer at later stages when treatment is less

More information

MEMORANDUM. Gloria Macdonald, Jennifer Benedict Nevada Division of Health Care Financing and Policy (DHCFP)

MEMORANDUM. Gloria Macdonald, Jennifer Benedict Nevada Division of Health Care Financing and Policy (DHCFP) MEMORANDUM To: From: Re: Gloria Macdonald, Jennifer Benedict Nevada Division of Health Care Financing and Policy (DHCFP) Bob Carey, Public Consulting Group (PCG) An Overview of the in the State of Nevada

More information

Sources. of the. Survey. No September 2011 N. nonelderly. health. population. in population in 2010, and. of Health Insurance.

Sources. of the. Survey. No September 2011 N. nonelderly. health. population. in population in 2010, and. of Health Insurance. September 2011 N No. 362 Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured: Analysis of the March 2011 Current Population Survey By Paul Fronstin, Employee Benefit Research Institute LATEST

More information

The Importance of Health Coverage

The Importance of Health Coverage The Importance of Health Coverage Today, approximately 90 percent of U.S. residents have health insurance with significant gains in health coverage occuring over the past five years. Health insurance facilitates

More information

Understanding Health Insurance Transitions and Public Health Insurance Coverage in Minnesota

Understanding Health Insurance Transitions and Public Health Insurance Coverage in Minnesota Understanding Health Insurance Transitions and Public Health Insurance Coverage in Minnesota JUNE 2017 There are a number of primary pathways to getting health insurance coverage in the United States:

More information

Issue Brief No Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured: Analysis of the March 2005 Current Population Survey

Issue Brief No Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured: Analysis of the March 2005 Current Population Survey Issue Brief No. 287 Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured: Analysis of the March 2005 Current Population Survey by Paul Fronstin, EBRI November 2005 This Issue Brief provides

More information

New York City Has a Higher Percentage of Uninsured than Does New York State or the Nation

New York City Has a Higher Percentage of Uninsured than Does New York State or the Nation New York City Has a Higher Percentage of Uninsured than Does New York State or the Nation Percent uninsured 3 28% 19% 19% 1 National* New York State* New York City* *Source: March 1996 Current Population

More information

Insurance, Access, and Quality of Care Among Hispanic Populations Chartpack

Insurance, Access, and Quality of Care Among Hispanic Populations Chartpack Insurance, Access, and Quality of Care Among Hispanic Populations 23 Chartpack Prepared by Michelle M. Doty The Commonwealth Fund For the National Alliance for Hispanic Health Meeting October 15 17, 23

More information

HEALTH COVERAGE AMONG YEAR-OLDS in 2003

HEALTH COVERAGE AMONG YEAR-OLDS in 2003 HEALTH COVERAGE AMONG 50-64 YEAR-OLDS in 2003 The aging of the population focuses attention on how those in midlife get health insurance. Because medical problems and health costs commonly increase with

More information

The Economic Downturn and Changes in Health Insurance Coverage, John Holahan & Arunabh Ghosh The Urban Institute September 2004

The Economic Downturn and Changes in Health Insurance Coverage, John Holahan & Arunabh Ghosh The Urban Institute September 2004 The Economic Downturn and Changes in Health Insurance Coverage, 2000-2003 John Holahan & Arunabh Ghosh The Urban Institute September 2004 Introduction On August 26, 2004 the Census released data on changes

More information

THE COMMONWEALTH FUND SURVEY OF HEALTH CARE IN NEW YORK CITY

THE COMMONWEALTH FUND SURVEY OF HEALTH CARE IN NEW YORK CITY THE COMMONWEALTH FUND SURVEY OF HEALTH CARE IN NEW YORK CITY David Sandman, Cathy Schoen, Catherine Des Roches, and Meron Makonnen MARCH 1998 THE COMMONWEALTH FUND The Commonwealth Fund is a philanthropic

More information

Chart Book: The Far-Reaching Benefits of the Affordable Care Act s Medicaid Expansion

Chart Book: The Far-Reaching Benefits of the Affordable Care Act s Medicaid Expansion 820 First Street NE, Suite 510 Washington, DC 20002 Tel: 202-408-1080 Fax: 202-408-1056 center@cbpp.org www.cbpp.org October 2, 2018 Chart Book: The Far-Reaching Benefits of the Affordable Care Act s Medicaid

More information

Medicaid Benefits for Children and Adults: Issues Raised by the National Governors Association s Preliminary Recommendations

Medicaid Benefits for Children and Adults: Issues Raised by the National Governors Association s Preliminary Recommendations Medicaid Benefits for Children and Adults: Issues Raised by the National Governors Association s Preliminary Recommendations July 12, 2005 Cindy Mann Overview The Medicaid benefit package determines which

More information

ASSESSING THE RESULTS

ASSESSING THE RESULTS HEALTH REFORM IN MASSACHUSETTS EXPANDING TO HEALTH INSURANCE ASSESSING THE RESULTS May 2012 Health Reform in Massachusetts, Expanding Access to Health Insurance Coverage: Assessing the Results pulls together

More information

FALLING APART. Declining Job-Based Health Coverage for Working Families in California and the United States

FALLING APART. Declining Job-Based Health Coverage for Working Families in California and the United States JUNE 2005 HEALTH CARE POLICY BRIEF FALLING APART Declining Job-Based Health Coverage for Working Families in California and the United States ARINDRAJIT DUBE, PH.D. AND KEN JACOBS UC Berkeley Center for

More information

One Quarter Of Public Reports Having Problems Paying Medical Bills, Majority Have Delayed Care Due To Cost. Relied on home remedies or over thecounter

One Quarter Of Public Reports Having Problems Paying Medical Bills, Majority Have Delayed Care Due To Cost. Relied on home remedies or over thecounter PUBLIC OPINION HEALTH SECURITY WATCH June 2012 The May Health Tracking Poll finds that many Americans continue to report problems paying medical bills and are taking specific actions to limit personal

More information

Sarah Jacobson NC Government Relations Director, American Heart Association

Sarah Jacobson NC Government Relations Director, American Heart Association Justus-Warren Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention Task Force January 8, 2019 Sarah Jacobson NC Government Relations Director, American Heart Association About Us Care4Carolina is a statewide coalition

More information

kaiser medicaid commission on and the uninsured How Will Health Reform Impact Young Adults? By Karyn Schwartz and Tanya Schwartz Executive Summary

kaiser medicaid commission on and the uninsured How Will Health Reform Impact Young Adults? By Karyn Schwartz and Tanya Schwartz Executive Summary I S S U E P A P E R kaiser commission on medicaid and the uninsured How Will Health Reform Impact Young Adults? By Karyn Schwartz and Tanya Schwartz Executive Summary May 2010 The health reform law that

More information

The Uninsured at the Starting Line

The Uninsured at the Starting Line REPORT The Uninsured at the Starting Line February 2014 Findings from the 2013 Kaiser Survey of Low-Income Americans and the ACA PREPARED BY Rachel Garfield, Rachel Licata, and Katherine Young The Uninsured

More information

THE WIDENING HEALTH CARE GAP BETWEEN HIGH- AND LOW-WAGE WORKERS. Sherry Glied and Bisundev Mahato Columbia University. May 2008

THE WIDENING HEALTH CARE GAP BETWEEN HIGH- AND LOW-WAGE WORKERS. Sherry Glied and Bisundev Mahato Columbia University. May 2008 I SSUE B RIEF THE WIDENING HEALTH CARE GAP BETWEEN HIGH- AND LOW-WAGE WORKERS Sherry Glied and Bisundev Mahato Columbia University May 2008 ABSTRACT: Rising health care costs affect everyone, but pose

More information

Health Insurance Coverage in the District of Columbia

Health Insurance Coverage in the District of Columbia Health Insurance Coverage in the District of Columbia Estimates from the 2009 DC Health Insurance Survey The Urban Institute April 2010 Julie Hudman, PhD Director Department of Health Care Finance Linda

More information

The Uninsured at the Starting Line in Missouri

The Uninsured at the Starting Line in Missouri REPORT The Uninsured at the Starting Line in Missouri April 2014 Missouri findings from the 2013 Kaiser Survey of Low-Income Americans and the ACA Prepared by: Rachel Licata and Rachel Garfield Kaiser

More information

Health Coverage by Race and Ethnicity: Examining Changes Under the ACA and the Remaining Uninsured

Health Coverage by Race and Ethnicity: Examining Changes Under the ACA and the Remaining Uninsured November 2016 Issue Brief Health Coverage by Race and Ethnicity: Examining Changes Under the ACA and the Remaining Uninsured Samantha Artiga, Petry Ubri, Julia Foutz, and Anthony Damico Executive Summary

More information

HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE IN MAINE

HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE IN MAINE HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE IN MAINE 2004 2005 By Allison Cook, Dawn Miller, and Stephen Zuckerman Commissioned by the maine health access foundation MAY 2007 Strategic solutions for Maine s health care

More information

Issue Brief. Does Medicaid Make a Difference? The COMMONWEALTH FUND. Findings from the Commonwealth Fund Biennial Health Insurance Survey, 2014

Issue Brief. Does Medicaid Make a Difference? The COMMONWEALTH FUND. Findings from the Commonwealth Fund Biennial Health Insurance Survey, 2014 Issue Brief JUNE 2015 The COMMONWEALTH FUND Does Medicaid Make a Difference? Findings from the Commonwealth Fund Biennial Health Insurance Survey, 2014 The mission of The Commonwealth Fund is to promote

More information

How Medicaid Enrollees Fare Compared with Privately Insured and Uninsured Adults

How Medicaid Enrollees Fare Compared with Privately Insured and Uninsured Adults ISSUE BRIEF APRIL 2017 How Medicaid Enrollees Fare Compared with Privately Insured and Uninsured Adults Findings from the Commonwealth Fund Biennial Health Insurance Survey, 2016 Munira Z. Gunja Senior

More information

Findings from Focus Groups: Select Populations in Dane County

Findings from Focus Groups: Select Populations in Dane County W ISCONSIN STATE PLANNING GRANT Briefing Paper 3, September 2001 Findings from Focus Groups: Select Populations in Dane County Wisconsin is one of 20 states that received a grant in 2000-01 from the Health

More information

The Future of Health Care Policy in Georgia

The Future of Health Care Policy in Georgia The Future of Health Care Policy in Georgia Amanda Ptashkin, JD Outreach and Advocacy Director, Georgians for a Healthy Future February 2, 2013 AAUW Policy Forum Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful,

More information

Access to Health Care

Access to Health Care Access to Health Care Of all the forms of inequity, injustice in health care is the most striking and inhumane. Martin Luther King, Jr. Historical Overview Modern health insurance in the United States

More information

Health Insurance Continuation Coverage Under COBRA

Health Insurance Continuation Coverage Under COBRA Cornell University ILR School DigitalCommons@ILR Federal Publications Key Workplace Documents 7-11-2013 Health Insurance Continuation Coverage Under COBRA Janet Kinzer Congressional Research Service Follow

More information

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Access to and Utilization of Care among Insured Adults

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Access to and Utilization of Care among Insured Adults Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Access to and Utilization of Care among Insured Adults Samantha Artiga, Katherine Young, Rachel Garfield, and Melissa Majerol Through its coverage expansions, the Affordable

More information

HEALTH COVERAGE FOR LOW-INCOME POPULATIONS: A COMPARISON OF MEDICAID AND SCHIP

HEALTH COVERAGE FOR LOW-INCOME POPULATIONS: A COMPARISON OF MEDICAID AND SCHIP April 2006 HEALTH COVERAGE FOR LOW-INCOME POPULATIONS: A COMPARISON OF MEDICAID AND SCHIP is often compared to the State Children s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) because both programs provide health

More information

CHART BOOK: A PROFILE OF HEALTH COVERAGE FOR MISSISSIPPI CHILDREN

CHART BOOK: A PROFILE OF HEALTH COVERAGE FOR MISSISSIPPI CHILDREN CHART BOOK: A PROFILE OF HEALTH COVERAGE FOR MISSISSIPPI CHILDREN June 2018 Overview UNINSURED ADULTS Mississippi County-Level Data UPDATE PUBLISHED JULY 2017 Researchers from the State Health Access Data

More information

OHIO MEDICAID ASSESSMENT SURVEY 2012

OHIO MEDICAID ASSESSMENT SURVEY 2012 OHIO MEDICAID ASSESSMENT SURVEY 2012 Taking the pulse of health in Ohio Policy Brief A HEALTH PROFILE OF OHIO WOMEN AND CHILDREN Kelly Balistreri, PhD and Kara Joyner, PhD Department of Sociology and the

More information

While one in five Californians overall is uninsured, the rate among those who work is even higher: one in four.

While one in five Californians overall is uninsured, the rate among those who work is even higher: one in four. : By the Numbers December 2013 Introduction California had the greatest number of uninsured residents of any state, 7 million, and the seventh largest percentage of uninsured residents under 65 in the

More information

The ACA s Coverage Expansion in Michigan: Demographic Characteristics and Coverage Projections

The ACA s Coverage Expansion in Michigan: Demographic Characteristics and Coverage Projections CENTER FOR HEALTHCARE RESEARCH & TRANSFORMATION Cover MichigaN 2013 JULY 2013 The ACA s Coverage in : Demographic Characteristics and Coverage Projections Introduction.... 2 Demographic characteristics

More information

Changing Policy. Improving Lives.

Changing Policy. Improving Lives. This is the first of two papers providing basic information about Louisiana s Medicaid program. It is intended as a primer for policymakers, the media and the general public as the program prepares for

More information

Regional Health Assessment. for Greater Kansas City

Regional Health Assessment. for Greater Kansas City 2015 Regional Health Assessment for Greater Kansas City Prepared for the REACH Healthcare Foundation by the Mid-America Regional Council www.reachhealth.org 913-432-4196 www.marc.org 816-474-4240 Dean

More information

Sixth Annual Nationwide TCHS Consumers Healthcare Survey: Stressed Out: Americans and Healthcare

Sixth Annual Nationwide TCHS Consumers Healthcare Survey: Stressed Out: Americans and Healthcare Sixth Annual Nationwide TCHS Consumers Healthcare Survey: Stressed Out: Americans and Healthcare October 2018 Table of Contents About the Transamerica Center for Health Studies Page 3 About the Survey

More information

Minnesota's Uninsured in 2017: Rates and Characteristics

Minnesota's Uninsured in 2017: Rates and Characteristics HEALTH ECONOMICS PROGRAM Minnesota's Uninsured in 2017: Rates and Characteristics FEBRUARY 2018 As noted in the companion issue brief to this analysis, Minnesota s uninsurance rate climbed significantly

More information

Special Report. Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured EBRI EMPLOYEE BENEFIT RESEARCH INSTITUTE

Special Report. Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured EBRI EMPLOYEE BENEFIT RESEARCH INSTITUTE January 1993 Jan. Feb. Sources of Health Insurance and Characteristics of the Uninsured Analysis of the March 1992 Current Population Survey Mar. Apr. May Jun. Jul. Aug. EBRI EMPLOYEE BENEFIT RESEARCH

More information

A PARTNERSHIP OF THE KAISER FAMILY FOUNDATION AND THE NEWSHOUR WITH JIM LEHRER. The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer/Kaiser Family Foundation.

A PARTNERSHIP OF THE KAISER FAMILY FOUNDATION AND THE NEWSHOUR WITH JIM LEHRER. The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer/Kaiser Family Foundation. HEALTH DESK A PARTNERSHIP OF THE KAISER FAMILY FOUNDATION AND THE NEWSHOUR WITH JIM LEHRER Highlights and Chartpack The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer/Kaiser Family Foundation National Survey on the Uninsured

More information

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIES

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIES ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities is grateful to the Atlantic Philanthropies, Nathan Cummings Foundation and David and Lucile Packard Foundation for their support of the Center

More information

Presenters Marc J. Smith Mary-Michal Rawling

Presenters Marc J. Smith Mary-Michal Rawling Presenters Marc J. Smith Mary-Michal Rawling The Affordable Care Act (ACA) Starting in January 1, 2014 it will be Required that most U.S. citizens and legal residents obtain and maintain healthcare coverage

More information

The State of Health Insurance in California:

The State of Health Insurance in California: The State of Health Insurance in California: February 2012 Findings from the 2009 California Health Interview Survey Shana Alex Lavarreda, PhD, MPP Livier Cabezas, MPAff Ken Jacobs Dylan H. Roby, PhD Nadereh

More information

The Impact of the Recession on Employment-Based Health Coverage

The Impact of the Recession on Employment-Based Health Coverage May 2010 No. 342 The Impact of the Recession on Employment-Based Health Coverage By Paul Fronstin, Employee Benefit Research Institute E X E C U T I V E S U M M A R Y HEALTH COVERAGE AND THE RECESSION:

More information

Health Insurance Coverage in 2013: Gains in Public Coverage Continue to Offset Loss of Private Insurance

Health Insurance Coverage in 2013: Gains in Public Coverage Continue to Offset Loss of Private Insurance Health Insurance Coverage in 2013: Gains in Public Coverage Continue to Offset Loss of Private Insurance Laura Skopec, John Holahan, and Megan McGrath Since the Great Recession peaked in 2010, the economic

More information

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Access to Health Insurance and Health Care

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Access to Health Insurance and Health Care POLICY RESEARCH REPORT April 2000 Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Access to Health Insurance and Health Care A Publication of UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation

More information

Highlights from the 2004 Florida Health Insurance Study Telephone Survey

Highlights from the 2004 Florida Health Insurance Study Telephone Survey Highlights from the 2004 Florida Health Insurance Study Telephone Survey In 1998, the Florida legislature created the Florida Health Insurance Study (FHIS) to provide reliable estimates of the percentage

More information

Fact Sheet. Health Insurance Coverage in Minnesota, Early Results from the 2009 Minnesota Health Access Survey. February, 2010

Fact Sheet. Health Insurance Coverage in Minnesota, Early Results from the 2009 Minnesota Health Access Survey. February, 2010 Fact Sheet February, 2010 Health Insurance Coverage in Minnesota, Early Results from the 2009 Minnesota Health Access Survey The Minnesota Department of Health and the University of Minnesota School of

More information

FUTURE MEDICAID GROWTH IS NOT DUE TO FLAWS IN THE PROGRAM S DESIGN, BUT TO DEMOGRAPHIC TRENDS AND GENERAL INCREASES IN HEALTH CARE COSTS

FUTURE MEDICAID GROWTH IS NOT DUE TO FLAWS IN THE PROGRAM S DESIGN, BUT TO DEMOGRAPHIC TRENDS AND GENERAL INCREASES IN HEALTH CARE COSTS 820 First Street, NE, Suite 510, Washington, DC 20002 Tel: 202-408-1080 Fax: 202-408-1056 center@cbpp.org www.cbpp.org February 4, 2005 FUTURE MEDICAID GROWTH IS NOT DUE TO FLAWS IN THE PROGRAM S DESIGN,

More information

Kansas City Regional Health Assessment

Kansas City Regional Health Assessment Kansas City Regional Health Assessment REACH Healthcare Foundation Prepared by Mid-America Regional Council 2013 The Regional Health Story How socio-economic factors, health access factors, health insurance

More information

Health Status, Health Insurance, and Health Services Utilization: 2001

Health Status, Health Insurance, and Health Services Utilization: 2001 Health Status, Health Insurance, and Health Services Utilization: 2001 Household Economic Studies Issued February 2006 P70-106 This report presents health service utilization rates by economic and demographic

More information

Uninsurance Is Not Just a Minority Issue: White Americans Are a Large Share of the Growth from 2000 to 2010

Uninsurance Is Not Just a Minority Issue: White Americans Are a Large Share of the Growth from 2000 to 2010 ACA Implementation Monitoring and Tracking Uninsurance Is Not Just a Minority Issue: White Americans Are a Large Share of the Growth from 2000 to 2010 November 2012 Frederic Blavin John Holahan Genevieve

More information

THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT

THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT What is it and What Does it MEAN for NEW YORK? WHAT IS THE PPACA? The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was passed in March of 2010 The ACA has two major goals: Increase

More information

PROPOSALS TO INCREASE HEALTH CARE ACCESS IN HAWAI`I

PROPOSALS TO INCREASE HEALTH CARE ACCESS IN HAWAI`I PROPOSALS TO INCREASE HEALTH CARE ACCESS IN HAWAI`I OVERVIEW January 2005 H awai`i has one of the lowest rates of uninsured in the country and a substantially higher percentage of employers offering health

More information

S N A P S H O T: Connecticut s Health Insurance Coverage

S N A P S H O T: Connecticut s Health Insurance Coverage S A P S H O T: Connecticut s Health Insurance Coverage Results of the Office of Health Care Access 2004 Household Survey OFFICE of HEALTH CARE ACCESS January 2005 S A P S H O T: Connecticut s Health Insurance

More information

The Uninsured and the ACA: A Primer

The Uninsured and the ACA: A Primer January 2019 The Uninsured and the ACA: A Primer Key Facts about Health Insurance and the Uninsured amidst Changes to the Affordable Care Act Prepared by: Rachel Garfield Kendal Orgera Kaiser Family Foundation

More information

State Health Care Reform in 2006

State Health Care Reform in 2006 January 2007 Issue Brief State Health Care Reform in 2006 Fast Facts Since the mid-1970 s state governments have experimented with a wide variety of initiatives to expand access to health care for the

More information

AFFORDABLE CARE ACT FAQ

AFFORDABLE CARE ACT FAQ AFFORDABLE CARE ACT FAQ What is the Healthcare Insurance Marketplace? The Marketplace is a new way to find quality health coverage. It can help if you don t have coverage now or if you have it but want

More information

Women in the Labor Force: A Databook

Women in the Labor Force: A Databook Cornell University ILR School DigitalCommons@ILR Federal Publications Key Workplace Documents 2-2013 Women in the Labor Force: A Databook Bureau of Labor Statistics Follow this and additional works at:

More information

Summary of the Impact of Health Care Reform on Employers

Summary of the Impact of Health Care Reform on Employers Summary of the Impact of Health Care Reform on Employers How to Use this Summary This summary identifies the main provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Act), as amended by the Health

More information

A Long Road Back to Work. The Realities of Unemployment since the Great Recession

A Long Road Back to Work. The Realities of Unemployment since the Great Recession 1101 Connecticut Ave NW, Suite 810 Washington, DC 20036 http://www.nul.org A Long Road Back to Work The Realities of Unemployment since the Great Recession June 2011 Valerie Rawlston Wilson, PhD National

More information

ACA Coverage Expansions and Low-Income Workers

ACA Coverage Expansions and Low-Income Workers ACA Coverage Expansions and Low-Income Workers Alanna Williamson, Larisa Antonisse, Jennifer Tolbert, Rachel Garfield, and Anthony Damico This brief highlights low-income workers and the impact of ACA

More information

Testimony of. Judith Feder, PhD. Before the. Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. U.S. House of Representatives.

Testimony of. Judith Feder, PhD. Before the. Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. U.S. House of Representatives. Testimony of Judith Feder, PhD Before the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform U.S. House of Representatives December 12, 2013 Judith Feder is a professor at the Georgetown University McCourt School

More information

Women s Coverage, Access, and Affordability: Key Findings from the 2017 Kaiser Women s Health Survey

Women s Coverage, Access, and Affordability: Key Findings from the 2017 Kaiser Women s Health Survey March 2018 Issue Brief Women s Coverage, Access, and Affordability: Key Findings from the 2017 Kaiser Women s Health Survey INTRODUCTION Since the Affordable Care Act (ACA) went into effect, there has

More information

Health Insurance in Nonstandard Jobs and Small Firms: Differences for Parents by Race and Ethnicity

Health Insurance in Nonstandard Jobs and Small Firms: Differences for Parents by Race and Ethnicity PERSPECTIVES ON LOW-INCOME WORKING FAMILIES THE URBAN INSTITUTE Health Insurance in Nonstandard Jobs and Small Firms: Differences for Parents by Race and Ethnicity Lisa Clemans-Cope, Genevieve Kenney,

More information

Issue Brief. Characteristics of the Nonelderly with Selected Sources of Health Insurance and Lengths of Uninsured Spells

Issue Brief. Characteristics of the Nonelderly with Selected Sources of Health Insurance and Lengths of Uninsured Spells June 1998 Jan. Characteristics of the Nonelderly with Selected Sources of Health Insurance and Lengths of Uninsured Spells by Craig Copeland, EBRI Feb. Mar. Apr. May Jun. Jul. Aug. EBRI EMPLOYEE BENEFIT

More information

ISSUE BRIEF. poverty threshold ($18,769) and deep poverty if their income falls below 50 percent of the poverty threshold ($9,385).

ISSUE BRIEF. poverty threshold ($18,769) and deep poverty if their income falls below 50 percent of the poverty threshold ($9,385). ASPE ISSUE BRIEF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND HEALTH CARE BURDENS OF PEOPLE IN DEEP POVERTY 1 (July 16, 2015) Americans living at the bottom of the income distribution often struggle to meet their basic needs

More information

Tracking Report. Trends in U.S. Health Insurance Coverage, PUBLIC INSURANCE COVERAGE GAIN OFFSETS SIGNIFICANT EMPLOYER COVERAGE DECLINE

Tracking Report. Trends in U.S. Health Insurance Coverage, PUBLIC INSURANCE COVERAGE GAIN OFFSETS SIGNIFICANT EMPLOYER COVERAGE DECLINE I N S U R A N C E C O V E R A G E & C O S T S Tracking Report RESULTS FROM THE COMMUNITY TRACKING STUDY NO. AUGUST Trends in U.S. Health Insurance Coverage, 1- By Bradley C. Strunk and James D. Reschovsky

More information

Exhibit 1. The Impact of Health Reform: Percent of Women Ages Uninsured by State

Exhibit 1. The Impact of Health Reform: Percent of Women Ages Uninsured by State Exhibit 1. The Impact of Health Reform: Percent of Women Ages 19 64 Uninsured by State 2008 09 2019 (estimated) OR CA 23% WA NV 23% AK ID AZ UT MT WY CO NM 28% ND SD NE KS TX 31% OK MN IA MO WI AR 25%

More information

Demographic and Economic Characteristics of Children in Families Receiving Social Security

Demographic and Economic Characteristics of Children in Families Receiving Social Security Each month, over 3 million children receive benefits from Social Security, accounting for one of every seven Social Security beneficiaries. This article examines the demographic characteristics and economic

More information

HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE AMONG WORKERS AND THEIR DEPENDENTS IN NEW YORK,

HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE AMONG WORKERS AND THEIR DEPENDENTS IN NEW YORK, HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE AMONG WORKERS AND THEIR DEPENDENTS IN NEW YORK, 2001 2002 UNITED HOSPITAL FUND Danielle Holahan Elise Hubert URBAN INSTITUTE John Holahan Linda Blumberg HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE

More information

STATE OF FLORIDA et al v. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES et al Doc. 83 Att. 3. Exhibit 2. Dockets.Justia.

STATE OF FLORIDA et al v. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES et al Doc. 83 Att. 3. Exhibit 2. Dockets.Justia. STATE OF FLORIDA et al v. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES et al Doc. 83 Att. 3 Exhibit 2 Dockets.Justia.com CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE Key Issues in

More information

POTENTIAL CHANGES TO RURAL HEALTHCARE 2017

POTENTIAL CHANGES TO RURAL HEALTHCARE 2017 POTENTIAL CHANGES TO RURAL HEALTHCARE 2017 WHAT S DIFFERENT ABOUT RURAL HEALTH CARE? For Patients Rural residents are less likely to have employer-sponsored health insurance Provider shortages limit timely

More information

Overview of the United States Healthcare System

Overview of the United States Healthcare System chapter 4 Overview of the United States Healthcare System LEARNING OBJECTIVES By the end of this chapter, you will be able to: Identify the key players who provide and finance health care in the United

More information

Women in the Labor Force: A Databook

Women in the Labor Force: A Databook Cornell University ILR School DigitalCommons@ILR Federal Publications Key Workplace Documents 12-2011 Women in the Labor Force: A Databook Bureau of Labor Statistics Follow this and additional works at:

More information

An Analysis of Rhode Island s Uninsured

An Analysis of Rhode Island s Uninsured An Analysis of Rhode Island s Uninsured Trends, Demographics, and Regional and National Comparisons OHIC 233 Richmond Street, Providence, RI 02903 HealthInsuranceInquiry@ohic.ri.gov 401.222.5424 Executive

More information

medicaid a n d t h e Medicaid Beneficiaries and Access to Care

medicaid a n d t h e Medicaid Beneficiaries and Access to Care o n medicaid a n d t h e uninsured April 2010 Medicaid Beneficiaries and Access to Care The plan for near-universal health coverage outlined in the new health care reform law, the Patient Protection and

More information

Saving Lives through Medicaid Expansion

Saving Lives through Medicaid Expansion Saving Lives through Medicaid Expansion November 2017 Introduction A primary goal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) 1 was to expand health insurance coverage and reduce the number

More information

AFFORDABLE CARE ACT. And the Aging Population Jan Figart, MS & Laura Ross-White, MSW. A Sign of the Times: Health Trends and Ethics

AFFORDABLE CARE ACT. And the Aging Population Jan Figart, MS & Laura Ross-White, MSW. A Sign of the Times: Health Trends and Ethics AFFORDABLE CARE ACT And the Aging Population Jan Figart, MS & Laura Ross-White, MSW A Sign of the Times: Health Trends and Ethics LiveStream: http://ostate.tv Learning Objectives Describe the history of

More information

kaiser medicaid a n d t h e uninsured commission o n Premiums and Cost-Sharing in Medicaid February 2013

kaiser medicaid a n d t h e uninsured commission o n Premiums and Cost-Sharing in Medicaid February 2013 P O L I C Y B R I E F kaiser commission o n medicaid a n d t h e uninsured Premiums and Cost-Sharing in Medicaid February 2013 Executive Summary Medicaid, the nation s public health insurance program for

More information

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in Colorado

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in Colorado The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in Colorado Colorado Center on Law and Policy 789 Sherman St., Suite 300, Denver, CO 80203 303-573-5669 September 20, 2013 The Problem 50 million uninsured

More information

Profile of Ohio s Medicaid-Enrolled Adults and Those who are Potentially Eligible

Profile of Ohio s Medicaid-Enrolled Adults and Those who are Potentially Eligible Thalia Farietta, MS 1 Rachel Tumin, PhD 1 May 24, 2016 1 Ohio Colleges of Medicine Government Resource Center EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The primary objective of this chartbook is to describe the population of

More information

Health Insurance Coverage in 2014: Significant Progress, but Gaps Remain

Health Insurance Coverage in 2014: Significant Progress, but Gaps Remain ACA Implementation Monitoring and Tracking Health Insurance Coverage in 2014: Significant Progress, but Gaps Remain September 2016 By Laura Skopec, John Holahan, and Patricia Solleveld With support from

More information

Fact Sheet May 15, 2014

Fact Sheet May 15, 2014 Fact Sheet May 15, 2014 Gains and Gaps in Oregon Health Coverage A View of the State of Working Oregon Even before full implementation of the Affordable Care Act, Oregon made progress in assuring health

More information

REPORT OF THE COUNCIL ON MEDICAL SERVICE. Effects of the Massachusetts Reform Effort and the Individual Mandate

REPORT OF THE COUNCIL ON MEDICAL SERVICE. Effects of the Massachusetts Reform Effort and the Individual Mandate REPORT OF THE COUNCIL ON MEDICAL SERVICE CMS Report -A-0 Subject: Presented by: Effects of the Massachusetts Reform Effort and the Individual Mandate David O. Barbe, MD, Chair 0 0 0 At the 00 Interim Meeting,

More information

REPORT OF THE COUNCIL ON MEDICAL SERVICE

REPORT OF THE COUNCIL ON MEDICAL SERVICE REPORT OF THE COUNCIL ON MEDICAL SERVICE CMS Report - I- Subject: Presented by: Defining the Uninsured and Underinsured Kay K. Hanley, MD, Chair ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

More information

Summary Most Americans with private group health insurance are covered through an employer, coverage that is generally provided to active employees an

Summary Most Americans with private group health insurance are covered through an employer, coverage that is generally provided to active employees an Health Insurance Continuation Coverage Under COBRA Janet Kinzer Information Research Specialist Meredith Peterson Information Research Specialist December 18, 2009 Congressional Research Service CRS Report

More information

Chapter 4 Medicaid Clients

Chapter 4 Medicaid Clients Chapter 4 Medicaid Clients Medicaid covers diverse client groups. The Medicaid caseload is always changing because of economic and other factors discussed in this chapter. Who Is Covered in Texas Medicaid

More information

Over the past few years numerous studies and reports

Over the past few years numerous studies and reports The Uninsured, The Working Uninsured, And The Public Many Americans appear to be unaware of just how many workers still lack insurance coverage. by Robert J. Blendon, John T. Young, and Catherine M. DesRoches

More information

Patterns of Unemployment

Patterns of Unemployment Patterns of Unemployment By: OpenStaxCollege Let s look at how unemployment rates have changed over time and how various groups of people are affected by unemployment differently. The Historical U.S. Unemployment

More information

Older Immigrants and Health Insurance: Differences by Region of Origin in Patterns and Sources of Coverage

Older Immigrants and Health Insurance: Differences by Region of Origin in Patterns and Sources of Coverage Older Immigrants and Health Insurance: Differences by Region of Origin in Patterns and Sources of Coverage Adriana M. Reyes and Melissa A. Hardy Pennsylvania State Univeristy Much attention has been paid

More information

Colorado s Eligible but Not Enrolled Population Continues to Decline Another Drop During Second Year of ACA

Colorado s Eligible but Not Enrolled Population Continues to Decline Another Drop During Second Year of ACA Colorado s but Not Enrolled Population Continues to Decline Another Drop During Second Year of ACA APRIL 2017 The number of uninsured Coloradans who did not enroll in Medicaid or Child Health Plan Plus

More information