How Did SCHIP Affect the Insurance Coverage of Immigrant Children?
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Thomas C Buchmueller
Abstract
The State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) significantly expanded public insurance eligibility and coverage for children in ``working poor" families. Despite this success, it is estimated that over 6 million children who are eligible for public insurance remain uninsured. An important first step for designing strategies to increase enrollment of eligible but uninsured children is to determine how the take-up of public coverage varies within the population. Because of their low rates of insurance coverage and unique enrollment barriers, children of immigrants are an especially important group to consider. We compare the effect of SCHIP eligibility on the insurance coverage of children of foreign-born and native-born parents. In contrast to research on the earlier Medicaid expansions, we find similar take-up rates for the two groups. This suggests that state outreach strategies were not only effective at increasing take-up overall, but were successful in reducing disparities in access to coverage.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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- How Did SCHIP Affect the Insurance Coverage of Immigrant Children?
- The Shape of Demand: What Does It Tell Us about Direct-to-Consumer Marketing of Antidepressants?
- Stemming the Tide? The Effect of Expanding Medicaid Eligibility On Health Insurance Coverage
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- The Effect of the Consolidated Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1985 on Health Care Utilization of Employment Separators
- Did 'Targets and Terror' Reduce Waiting Times in England for Hospital Care?
- Mitigating the Problem of Unmeasured Outcomes in Quality Reports
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Articles in the same Issue
- Advances Article
- How Did SCHIP Affect the Insurance Coverage of Immigrant Children?
- The Shape of Demand: What Does It Tell Us about Direct-to-Consumer Marketing of Antidepressants?
- Stemming the Tide? The Effect of Expanding Medicaid Eligibility On Health Insurance Coverage
- Health Care Economics and Policy: An Introduction
- Contributions Article
- Sequential Patterns of Drug Use Initiation - Can We Believe In the Gateway Theory?
- The Effect of the Consolidated Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1985 on Health Care Utilization of Employment Separators
- Did 'Targets and Terror' Reduce Waiting Times in England for Hospital Care?
- Mitigating the Problem of Unmeasured Outcomes in Quality Reports
- Advertising, Free-Riding, and Price Differences in the Market for Prescription Drugs
- Patient Welfare under the Legal Standard of Care