Publication | Closed Access
Saving Teens: Using a Policy Discontinuity to Estimate the Effects of Medicaid Eligibility
103
Citations
35
References
2015
Year
Health Care DisparityHealth DisparitiesFinancial ProtectionMortality RatesSocial Determinants Of HealthPolicy AnalysisRacial DisparitiesHealth InequalitySocial InsurancePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchHealth Insurance ReformPolicy EvaluationPublic PolicyHealth PolicyMedicaid EligibilityHealth InsuranceWhite ChildrenNational Health InsuranceBirth Date CutoffHealth EconomicsPolicy DiscontinuityPediatricsChild Health PolicyDemographySocial PolicyLong-term Care InsuranceHealth Disparity
Abstract We examine the immediate and longer-term mortality effects of public health insurance eligibility during childhood. Our identification exploits expansions in Medicaid eligibility that applied only to children born after September 30, 1983. This feature resulted in a large discontinuity in the cumulative years of eligibility of children at this birth date cutoff. Under the expansions, black children gained twice the years of Medicaid eligibility as white children. We find a later-life decline in the rate of disease-related mortality for black cohorts born after the cutoff. We find no evidence of a similar mortality improvement for white children.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1