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Public Insurance and Mortality
by
Goodman-Bacon, Andrew
in
1950-1979
/ Child mortality
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Infant mortality
/ Infants
/ Insurance
/ Insurance coverage
/ Medicaid
/ Mortality
/ Mortality rates
/ Political economy
/ Welfare
/ Welfare recipients
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
Public Insurance and Mortality
by
Goodman-Bacon, Andrew
in
1950-1979
/ Child mortality
/ Children
/ Children & youth
/ Infant mortality
/ Infants
/ Insurance
/ Insurance coverage
/ Medicaid
/ Mortality
/ Mortality rates
/ Political economy
/ Welfare
/ Welfare recipients
2018
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Journal Article
Public Insurance and Mortality
2018
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Overview
This paper provides new evidence that Medicaid’s introduction reduced infant and child mortality in the 1960s and 1970s. Mandated coverage of all cash welfare recipients induced substantial cross-state variation in the share of children immediately eligible for the program. Before Medicaid, higher- and lower-eligibility states had similar infant and child mortality trends. After Medicaid, public insurance utilization increased and mortality fellmore rapidly among children and infants in high-Medicaid-eligibility states. Mortality among nonwhite children on Medicaid fell by 20 percent, leading to a reduction in aggregate nonwhite child mortality rates of 11 percent.
Publisher
University of Chicago Press,Univ. Press,University of Chicago, acting through its Press
Subject
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