November 28, 2023

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Millions of kids in US have inadequate health care coverage

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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Inadequate health coverage is a particular problem for commercially insured children, according to a new study released by Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. The research shows that coverage gaps are affecting publicly insured children as well. Until now, prior research had focused on documenting rates and trends in insurance consistency for children covered by all insurance types. The findings are published in JAMA Health Forum.

"While uninsurance among has generally been declining in the U.S., our results highlight the need for a renewed focus on making sure that children's coverage is affordable for families and provides the benefits that children need" said Jamie Daw, Ph.D., assistant professor of policy and management at Columbia Mailman School of Public Health.

Using representative data from the 2016-2021 National Survey of Children's Health, the researchers analyzed parent- or caregiver-reported information on health insurance data for children from age 0-17 and also compared changes during COVID-19, identifying inconsistent and inadequate coverage within each insurance type.

Inadequate insurance was defined by failure to meet three criteria: benefits were sufficient to meet a child's needs; coverage allowed a child to see needed ; and reasonable annual out-of-pocket payments for child's health care.

Inconsistent coverage was three times higher among publicly compared to commercially-insured children. However, inadequate insurance was more prevalent overall, affecting nearly 1 in 5 U.S. children (16.5 million annually), with particularly high rates among the commercially-insured. The researchers also found that the child and family characteristics associated with higher rates of inconsistent and inadequate coverage differed by insurance type.

Of the sample of 203,691 insured children, 34.5% were publicly-insured and 65.5% were commercially-insured. Compared to commercially-insured children, publicly-insured children had higher rates of inconsistent coverage (4.2 vs. 1.4%,) and lower rates of inadequate coverage (12 vs. 33%). Relative to 2016-19, inconsistent insurance decreased by 42% for publicly-insured children and inadequate insurance decreased by 6%, for commercially-insured children during COVID.

In summary, the findings indicate:

Also, Daw and colleagues note there is a particular need for state Medicaid programs to conduct targeted outreach and linguistically and culturally competent navigation assistance for immigrant families.

"Federal COVID-19 relief policies prevented states from disenrolling children on Medicaid and instituted enhanced subsidies for private Marketplace coverage. Our study findings suggest these policies made an important difference for families during the pandemic: publicly insured children had fewer coverage gaps and coverage was more affordable for commercially insured children. Policymakers should be actively considering how to maintain and build on these gains," noted Daw.

Co-authors are Sarra Yekta, Columbia Mailman School of Public Health; Faelan Jacobson-Davies and Lindsay Admon University of Michigan; and Stephen Patrick, Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Journal information: JAMA Health Forum

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