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Children’s Health Insurance Program Premiums Adversely Affect Enrollment, Especially Among Lower-Income Children
by
Selden, Thomas M.
, Hudson, Julie
, Hill, Steven C.
, Abdus, Salam
in
Age
/ Appropriations and expenditures
/ Child health
/ Child poverty
/ Children
/ Childrens health
/ Childrens health insurance programs
/ Employers
/ Enrollments
/ Expenditures
/ Families & family life
/ Family
/ Family income
/ Government programs
/ Health care expenditures
/ Health care industry
/ Health insurance
/ Health surveys
/ Immigration policy
/ Income
/ Indigent care
/ Insurance
/ Insurance coverage
/ Insurance premiums
/ Low income groups
/ Medicaid
/ Medicaid program
/ Parent-child relations
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Poverty
/ Premiums
/ Studies
2014
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Children’s Health Insurance Program Premiums Adversely Affect Enrollment, Especially Among Lower-Income Children
by
Selden, Thomas M.
, Hudson, Julie
, Hill, Steven C.
, Abdus, Salam
in
Age
/ Appropriations and expenditures
/ Child health
/ Child poverty
/ Children
/ Childrens health
/ Childrens health insurance programs
/ Employers
/ Enrollments
/ Expenditures
/ Families & family life
/ Family
/ Family income
/ Government programs
/ Health care expenditures
/ Health care industry
/ Health insurance
/ Health surveys
/ Immigration policy
/ Income
/ Indigent care
/ Insurance
/ Insurance coverage
/ Insurance premiums
/ Low income groups
/ Medicaid
/ Medicaid program
/ Parent-child relations
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Poverty
/ Premiums
/ Studies
2014
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Children’s Health Insurance Program Premiums Adversely Affect Enrollment, Especially Among Lower-Income Children
by
Selden, Thomas M.
, Hudson, Julie
, Hill, Steven C.
, Abdus, Salam
in
Age
/ Appropriations and expenditures
/ Child health
/ Child poverty
/ Children
/ Childrens health
/ Childrens health insurance programs
/ Employers
/ Enrollments
/ Expenditures
/ Families & family life
/ Family
/ Family income
/ Government programs
/ Health care expenditures
/ Health care industry
/ Health insurance
/ Health surveys
/ Immigration policy
/ Income
/ Indigent care
/ Insurance
/ Insurance coverage
/ Insurance premiums
/ Low income groups
/ Medicaid
/ Medicaid program
/ Parent-child relations
/ Parents
/ Parents & parenting
/ Poverty
/ Premiums
/ Studies
2014
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Children’s Health Insurance Program Premiums Adversely Affect Enrollment, Especially Among Lower-Income Children
Journal Article
Children’s Health Insurance Program Premiums Adversely Affect Enrollment, Especially Among Lower-Income Children
2014
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Overview
Both Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), which are run by the states and funded by federal and state dollars, offer health insurance coverage for low-income children. Thirty- three states charged premiums for children at some income ranges in CHIP or Medicaid in 2013. Using data from the 1999-2010 Medical Expenditure Panel Surveys, we show that the relationship between premiums and coverage varies considerably by income level and by parental access to employer-sponsored insurance. Among children with family incomes above 150 percent of the federal poverty level, a $10 increase in monthly premiums is associated with a 1.6-percentage-point reduction in Medicaid or CHIP coverage. In this income range, the increase in uninsurance may be higher among those children whose parents lack an offer of employer-sponsored insurance than among those whose parents have such an offer. Among children with family incomes of 101-150 percent of poverty, a $10 increase in monthly premiums is associated with a 6.7-percentage-point reduction in Medicaid or CHIP coverage and a 3.3-percentage-point increase in uninsurance. In this income range, the increase in uninsurance is even larger among children whose parents lack offers of employer coverage.
Publisher
The People to People Health Foundation, Inc., Project HOPE
Subject
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