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Why Millions Of Children Eligible For Medicaid And SCHIP Are Uninsured: Poor Retention Versus Poor Take-Up
73
Citations
10
References
2007
Year
Family MedicineHealth Insurance DesignIncome SecurityFinancial ProtectionHealth FinancingInsurance RegulationsPublic HealthManaged CareHealth Services ResearchPoor RetentionHealth SciencesHealth Insurance ReformHealth PolicyHealth InsuranceChildren EligibleNational Health InsuranceHealth ReimbursementSchip Are UninsuredPublic CoverageHealth Insurance ProgramHealth EconomicsChild HealthChild Health PolicySocial PolicyLong-term Care Insurance
More than two-thirds of uninsured U.S. children are eligible for public coverage, and most current policy debate assumes that this is largely attributable to poor take-up. This paper explores the contribution of poor retention in Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) to this phenomenon. The results indicate that one-third of all uninsured children in 2006 had been enrolled in Medicaid or SCHIP the previous year. Among those uninsured but eligible for public coverage in 2006, at least 42 percent had been enrolled in Medicaid or SCHIP the previous year. Both of these measures of disenrollment have increased since 2000.
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