SCHIP Program Enrollment: December 2001 Update

Published: May 31, 2002

This report presents information on the number of children enrolled in SCHIP for each state, for specific months from 1998 to 2001. As of December 2001, the SCHIP program covered 3.5 million low-income children. An increase of 780,000 from the previous year.

Welfare and Work:  How Do They Affect Parents’ Health Care Coverage?

Published: May 31, 2002

Welfare and Work: How Do They Affect Parents’ Health Care Coverage?

This fact sheet presents an overview of issues involving health care coverage for parents who are shifting from welfare to the workforce.

Low-Income Parents’ Access to Medicaid Five Years After Welfare Reform

Published: May 31, 2002

This policy brief examines health coverage for low-income parents after the 1996 welfare law broke the historical connection between Medicaid coverage and welfare. Many states have altered their rules and some have expanded coverage for low-income working parents.

Poll Finding

NPR/Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard Kennedy School of Government Survey on Health Care – Chart Pack

Published: May 30, 2002

New NPR/Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard Kennedy School of Government Survey on Health Care

A new survey by NPR, the Kaiser Family Foundation, and Harvard s Kennedy School of Government finds that many Americans have real problems when it comes to accessing and paying for health care, and even if they haven’t yet faced a problem, many worry about getting and paying for care in the future. The survey also shows that, while people think helping seniors with the cost of prescription drugs should be a priority, most seniors would not be willing to pay significantly more than they pay now for drug coverage under Medicare.

Survey on Health Care

Published: May 30, 2002

NPR/Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard Kennedy School of Government Survey on Health Care

A survey by NPR, the Kaiser Family Foundation, and Harvard s Kennedy School of Government finds that many Americans have real problems when it comes to accessing and paying for health care, and even if they haven’t yet faced a problem, many worry about getting and paying for care in the future. The survey also shows that, while people think helping seniors with the cost of prescription drugs should be a priority, most seniors would not be willing to pay significantly more than they pay now for drug coverage under Medicare.

Poll Finding

NPR/Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard Kennedy School of Government Survey on Health Care – Summary of Findings

Published: May 30, 2002

New NPR/Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard Kennedy School of Government Survey on Health Care

A new survey by NPR, the Kaiser Family Foundation, and Harvard s Kennedy School of Government finds that many Americans have real problems when it comes to accessing and paying for health care, and even if they haven’t yet faced a problem, many worry about getting and paying for care in the future. The survey also shows that, while people think helping seniors with the cost of prescription drugs should be a priority, most seniors would not be willing to pay significantly more than they pay now for drug coverage under Medicare.

Poll Finding

New NPR/Kaiser Family Foundation/Harvard Kennedy School of Government Survey on Health Care

Published: May 30, 2002

A new survey by NPR, the Kaiser Family Foundation, and Harvard s Kennedy School of Government finds that many Americans have real problems when it comes to accessing and paying for health care, and even if they haven’t yet faced a problem, many worry about getting and paying for care in the future. The survey also shows that, while people think helping seniors with the cost of prescription drugs should be a priority, most seniors would not be willing to pay significantly more than they pay now for drug coverage under Medicare.

Trends and Indicators in the Changing Health Care Marketplace 2002

Published: Apr 30, 2002

This chartbook provides information on key trends in the health care marketplace including health spending, the structure of the health care marketplace, and health plan and provider relationships. It highlights data on health plan enrollment, premiums, and benefits, and the implications of health market trends for consumers and the safety net.

Chartbook (.pdf)

Sicker and Poorer: The Consequences of Being Uninsured

Published: Apr 30, 2002

Sicker and Poorer: The Consequences of Being Uninsured

A new report by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured synthesizes the major findings of the past 25 years of health services research assessing the most important effects of health insurance. The report evaluates thousands of citations and 230 research articles to assess the consequences of being uninsured for health status and economic opportunity and concludes that the weight of this large body of research makes a compelling case that health insurance does lead to improved health and better access to care.

The major findings from the paper include:

  • The uninsured receive less preventive care, are diagnosed at more advanced disease stages, and once diagnosed, tend to receive less therapeutic care (drugs and surgical interventions);
  • Having health insurance would reduce mortality rates for the uninsured by 10 15 percent; and
  • Better health would improve annual earnings by about 10 – 30 percent (depending on measures and specific health condition) and would increase educational attainment.