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Wednesday, June 30, 2004

CDC report reveals lowest level of uninsured children since 1997

[Daniel Yee, "CDC: Uninsured Children Hits Lowest Level," Associated Press, New York Newsday, 30 June 2004.]

Expanded Medicaid coverage has led to a significant decline in the number of uninsured children since 1997:

Only 10.1 percent of U.S. children were uninsured last year, the lowest level ever recorded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 1997, 13.9 percent were not covered by health insurance.

"We were surprised how dramatic the drop was in children," said Robin Cohen, CDC health statistician.

Around 2.6 million more children were insured last year than in 1997, the CDC said.

The increase was attributed to expanded state health insurance programs.

The CDC said the percentage of Americans overall without health insurance remained steady at 15 percent between 1997 and 2003.

But the percentage of working-age adults without coverage increased, from 18.9 percent in 1997 to 20.1 percent in 2003, the CDC said.


It is interesting to note how well HSAs and mandate-free policies might fit this population:

Most of the country's uninsured are single adults who work for companies too small to offer health insurance, said Kenneth Thorpe, chairman of Emory University's department of health policy and management.

"It's just unaffordable for most low- and moderate-income workers," Thorpe said. "That's the area where we haven't done anywhere near as well on the covered side."


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