Poll Finding

Chartpack: Awareness and Perceptions of the Movie “Sicko”

Published: Aug 1, 2007

Chartpack: Awareness and Perceptions of the Movie “Sicko”

This chartpack highlights key results from the survey Awareness and Perceptions of the Movie “Sicko”: Selected Findings from the Kaiser Health Tracking Poll: Election 2008.

Chartpack (.pdf)

Findings from the Kaiser/Commonwealth/Tufts-New England Medical Center 2006 National Survey of Seniors and Prescription Drugs – Chartpack

Published: Aug 1, 2007

This chartpack contains key data from the Kaiser/Commonwealth/Tufts-New England Medical Center 2006 National Survey of Seniors and Prescription Drugs. Findings of the survey were published in a Health Affairs Web Exclusive on Aug. 21, 2007.

Chartpack (.pdf)

Poll Finding

Toplines: Awareness and Perceptions of the Movie “Sicko”

Published: Aug 1, 2007

Toplines: Awareness and Perceptions of the Movie “Sicko”

This document contains the detailed toplines from the survey Awareness and Perceptions of the Movie “Sicko”: Selected Findings from the Kaiser Health Tracking Poll: Election 2008.

Toplines (.pdf)

For results from the full August 2007 Kaiser Health Tracking Poll: Election 2008, go to: www.kff.org/kaiserpolls/h08_7690.

Poll Finding

Awareness and Perceptions of the Movie “Sicko”

Published: Aug 1, 2007

An August 2007 poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation looks at the potential impact of Michael Moore’s documentary “Sicko.” The survey finds that although only 4% of adults say they have watched it, almost half (46%) had seen the movie or heard or read something about it a little over a month after its national release.

Among those familiar with “Sicko,” 45% said they have had a discussion with friends, co-workers, and family about the U.S. health system as a result of the movie; 43% said they were more likely to think there is a need to reform the health system. About equal numbers believe the movie accurately represents problems in the U.S. health system versus overstating them. Still, “Sicko” has not altered what have long been the fundamental factors shaping the public’s views on health care, such as personal health care experiences and proposals from presidential candidates.

The Kaiser Foundation asked this series of questions about “Sicko” as a part of the Kaiser Health Tracking Survey: Election 2008 from August 2 to August 8 among a nationally representative telephone sample of 1,500 adults, including 748 adults who reported having seen the movie or heard or read anything about it.

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News Release

Toplines

Chartpack

SCHIP Reauthorization: Key Questions in the Debate – A Description of New Administrative Guidance and the House and Senate Proposals – Issue Brief

Published: Aug 1, 2007

SCHIP Reauthorization: Key Questions in the Debate – A Description of New Administrative Guidance and the House and Senate Proposals

The U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives have approved legislation to reauthorize the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), which covers six million low-income children today. With the release of the Census health coverage numbers, this updated brief answers key questions that explain the ongoing policy debate about this public health coverage program, which builds on Medicaid’s coverage of 28 million poor and low-income children. It includes a side-by-side of the House and Senate legislative provisions and information on the new CMS guidance.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

Learning From History: Deinstitutionalization of People with Mental Illness As Precursor to Long-Term Care Reform

Published: Jul 31, 2007

This report examines what policy lessons can be learned from the deinstitutionalization of people with mental illnesses and applied to potential long-term care reform for the elderly or those with significant disabilities. The study assesses the reforms that took place under deinstitutionalization, their impact and what mistakes were made. It also discusses the take-away lessons for long-term care policy, with a focus on planning, financing, living situations and the role of families, workplace issues, and the political landscape.

Report (.pdf)

A Race to the Top: Illinois’s All Kids Initiative

Published: Jul 31, 2007

A Race to the Top: Illinois’s All Kids Initiative

In the summer of 2006, Illinois launched All Kids, the nation’s first universal coverage program for children. Several states have observed Illinois’ experience and are proceeding with their own coverage initiatives. This case study of Illinois’ All Kids initiative describes the key features of the program, examines state decisions on program design and highlights some early program experiences.

Report (.pdf)

Making Sense of Recent Estimates of Eligible but Uninsured Children

Published: Jul 31, 2007

As Congress reauthorizes the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), accurate estimates of the number of children who are eligible for Medicaid and SCHIP but remain uninsured are critical for policy and budget development. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) concluded that there are between 5 and 6 million children who are uninsured and eligible for Medicaid and SCHIP. CBO’s assessment is in sharp contrast to estimates released recently by the Bush Administration that indicating there were only 1.1 million eligible but uninsured children. This brief describes the methodologies underlying the two sets of estimates that have been at the center of the controversy.

Issue Brief (.pdf)

Poll Finding

More Than Four in 10 Adults in New Orleans Report Worse Health Care Access Post-Katrina

Published: Jul 31, 2007

Embargoed for release until:July 31, 2007

For further information contact:Rakesh Singh, rsingh@kff.org, (202) 654-1313 Craig Palosky, cpalosky@kff.org, (202) 347-5270

MORE THAN FOUR IN 10 ADULTS IN NEW ORLEANS REPORT WORSE HEALTH CARE ACCESS POST-KATRINA

In Orleans Parish, One in Four Adults Reported Being Uninsured And 70 Percent of Uninsured Adults were African Americans

As the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina’s landfall approaches, new analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation of its household survey of people in the New Orleans area shows that more than four in 10 (43 percent) adults reported at least one health care access problem in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Underscoring the racial disparities documented generally in the Kaiser household survey, 70 percent of the one in four adults without health insurance in Orleans Parish were African Americans. In Orleans Parish, the survey found that 33 percent of African American adults were uninsured versus 12 percent of white adults.

The newly released, Health Challenges for the People of New Orleans, is a follow-up to the May 2007 report, Giving Voice to the People of New Orleans: The Kaiser Post-Katrina Baseline Survey. The new 65-page report examines the health care status of the adult population of Greater New Orleans based on a Fall 2006 household interview survey of residents of the parishes of Orleans, Jefferson, Plaquemines and St. Bernard and details their health coverage and access to health care services after the disaster.

Some of the most frequently reported health access problems included deteriorationin the ability to have health needs met now compared to before Katrina (22 percent), having a harder time getting to their place of medical care now (18 percent), and having a different medical provider after Katrina (16 percent).

“Many of the health access problems highlighted in our survey are common in other low-income urban areas across the country. What makes New Orleans unique is the lack of a health care system able to respond post-Katrina. The findings help explain why residents ranked getting medical facilities up and running as such a top priority only behind repairing levees and controlling crime,” said Kaiser Family Foundation President and CEO Drew E. Altman, Ph.D.

Health Coverage Contrast

The survey found that among all New Orleans area adults, one in five reported being uninsured, substantially higher than the national average of 15 percent for this group. But by comparison, the survey shows that in the Greater New Orleans area, less than one in 10 (9 percent) of households with children reported a child lacked health insurance. And most notably, in an area characterized by racial disparities documented throughout the survey, the percentage without health insurance was comparable for both African American and white households with children.

“Louisiana is among the state leaders in covering low-income children, but ranks at the very bottom of coverage of their low-income adult population, with Medicaid eligibility levels at 20 percent of the Federal Poverty Level or $4,130 per year for an adult in a working family of four,” said Foundation Executive Vice President Diane Rowland, Sc.D. “Although Louisiana is poised to potentially narrow the racial disparity gap in coverage of children even further with a new state law expanding their State Children’s Health Insurance Program to children up to 300 percent of the Federal Poverty Level, addressing coverage for the one in five uninsured adults remains a real challenge,” she added.

The uninsured rates among a variety of vulnerable subgroups are also of note. Fifty-six percent of previous users of the Charity Hospital System—an integral part of the New Orleans health care delivery system prior to Hurricane Katrina, predominantly served the uninsured—reported being without coverage.

Looking Ahead

As policymakers at the federal, state, and local level grapple with the challenges presented by Hurricane Katrina, the Kaiser Family Foundation will continue to give voice to the people of New Orleans and supply policymakers with a source of information about who is returning to the area and how they are faring. Future Kaiser household surveys planned for the next two years will monitor progress and changes.

The full survey analysis, Health Challenges for the People of New Orleans, along with a link to the broader May 2007 analysis is available online at http://www.kff.org/kaiserpolls/7659.cfm. Additionally, Diane Rowland will testify on August 1 to the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Energy and Commerce’s Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations about the key health findings from the household survey. The Subcommittee is holding the hearing, “Post-Katrina Health Care in the New Orleans Region: Progress and Continuing Concerns Part II.”

METHODOLOGY

The Kaiser Post-Katrina Baseline Survey of the New Orleans Area was designed and analyzed by researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation. This in-person survey was conducted door-to-door from September 12 to November 13, 2006. Interviews were completed in English and Spanish among 1,504 randomly selected adults ages 18 and older residing in Orleans, Jefferson, Plaquemines, and St. Bernard parishes. These four neighboring parishes make up Region 1 as defined by Louisiana’s Department of Health and Hospitals, an administrative region used for recovery planning. The sample design was a stratified area probability sample, with 456 sampling points distributed proportionate to expected population size in each of the four parishes, and in each of fourteen Census tract defined neighborhoods in Orleans Parish. An oversample was drawn in Orleans to allow for more detailed analysis of this area; final results have been weighted so that each parish reflects its estimated share of the area’s population. The margin of sampling error for the full sample is plus or minus 4 percentage points; for results based on Orleans Parish or Jefferson Parish it is plus or minus 5 percentage points. For results based on other subsets of respondents the margin of sampling error may be larger. ICR/International Communications Research collaborated with Kaiser researchers on sample design and weighting, and supervised the fieldwork.

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Medicaid’s Rehabilitation Services Option:  Overview and Current Policy Issues

Published: Jul 30, 2007

Medicaid’s Rehabilitation Services Option: Overview and Current Policy Issues

In 2007, the President reintroduced a plan to place new restrictions on the types of services allowable under the Medicaid rehabilitation services option (called the rehab option) to yield federal budget savings of $2.29 billion over the next five years. Currently, 47 states plus the District of Columbia provide at least some type of mental health, substance abuse, and physical health services under the rehab option. This policy brief provides an overview of the Medicaid rehab option and explores current policy issues.

Issue Brief (.pdf)