• Health affairs · Aug 2014

    Children's health insurance program premiums adversely affect enrollment, especially among lower-income children.

    • Salam Abdus, Julie Hudson, Steven C Hill, and Thomas M Selden.
    • Salam Abdus (salam.abdus@ahrq.hhs.gov) is a senior economist at Social and Scientific Systems, in Rockville, Maryland.
    • Health Aff (Millwood). 2014 Aug 1; 33 (8): 1353-60.

    AbstractBoth 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. Project HOPE—The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc.

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