Presentation materials from Lynn Blewett's participation in panel discussion on November 13, 2013, about the challenge of enrolling the low-income uninsured in harder-to-reach communities in Minnesota's health insurance exchange. The discussion was sponsored by the Center for the Study of Politics and Governance at the University of Minnesota's Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs and also featured Minnesota State Representative Jim Abeler and State Senator Tony Lourey.
Webinar: Young Adult Coverage Expansion Policies - Further Analysis and New Questions
SHARE hosted a webinar on April 2, 2013, featuring Dr. Joel Cantor, Director of the Center for State Health Policy at Rutgers University. Dr. Cantor addressed a range of questions from his SHARE-funded research evaluating state and federal young adult dependent coverage expansion policies using the Current Population Survey (CPS). Dr. Cantor was joined by Dr. Thomas Buchmueller, Professor of Risk Management and Insurance and Professor of Business Economics and Public Policy at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. Dr. Buchmueller discussed findings from similar research on young adult coverage using the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) and the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) and presented findings from an NHIS-based analysis of the impact of the expansion of young adult dependent coverage on access to care. Access the webinar recording, presentation slides, and supporting materials.
Premium Contribution Requirements for CHIP Coverage Decrease Enrollment
A research team led by José Escarce, MD, PhD, Professor of Medicine in the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, published findings from its SHARE-funded research in an article in Health Services Research (HSR). The authors of the article, led by Carole Roan Gresenz, PhD, used a selection correction simulation model to examine the effects of Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) income eligibility thresholds and premium contribution requirements on health insurance coverage outcomes among children. They found that premium contribution requirements decreased enrollment in public coverage and increased enrollment in private coverage, with larger effects for greater contribution levels.
Strict Network Adequacy Standards Could Exacerbate Rural Access Problems
A research team led by Andrew Coburn, PhD, Director of the Maine Rural Health Research Center at the University of Southern Maine, has published findings from its SHARE-funded research in The Journal of Rural Health.The article, under the lead authorship of Jean Talbot, PhD, examines rural issues surrounding network adequacy standards and offers recommendations for crafting standards that incorporate a degree of flexibility in order to ensure the willingness of Qualified Health Plans to serve rural areas.
RWJF Highlights SHARE Grant Results
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is highlighting project results from a number of SHARE grants in a series of online reports:
Preliminary Findings from Connecticut’s Health Enhancement Program
Dr. Richard Hirth, Research Director at the Center for Value-Based Insurance Design (V-BID) at the University of Michigan, issued preliminary findings on Connecticut’s state employee Health Enhancement Program (HEP). The program provides financial incentives for participants to obtain high-value services and has thus far seen significant positive results. For example, monthly emergency room visits fell from approximately 3,500 in July 2011 to about 2,700 in May 2012. Dr. Hirth and his team are currently conducting a rigorous SHARE-funded evaluation of HEP to identify trends in utilization and expenditures made by HEP enrollees, with results available within the next year.
Grantee Spotlight
Lindsey Leininger, PhD, MA
Dr. Leininger is the Principal Investigator on a SHARE-funded project assessing the value of collecting self-reported health measures at the time of application for Medicaid—a novel use of Medicaid enrollment systems—for the purpose of predicting health care utilization. Dr. Leininger is an Assistant Professor at the University of Illinois, where her current work focuses on how state Medicaid agencies can optimize and improve upon their existing data resources to implement cost-effective quality improvement initiatives. Her research expertise includes the health care safety net and the health care utilization experiences of children and adolescents. Learn more.
Medicaid Undercount in the American Community Survey
November 2014:
Presentation by SHADAC Senior Research Fellow Joanna Turner at the 2013 Research Conference of the Federal Committee on Statistical Methodology (FCSM), on November 4, 2013, in Washington, DC.
SHADAC Senior Research Fellow Joanna Turner presented on November 4, 2013, at the annual research conference of the Federal Committee on Statistical Methodology, where she discussed findings from an analysis of the Medicaid undercount in the American Community Survey (ACS). The analysis was the result of a collaborative effort between SHADAC and the U.S. Census Bureau to extend previous Medicaid undercount research to the ACS by describing the concordance of Medicaid reporting in the ACS and enrollment data in administrative records from the Medicaid Statistical Information System (MSIS). The undercount in the ACS, at roughly 22.9 percent, appears in line with other federal surveys.
Publication
Disparities in Health Insurance for Children with Same-Sex Parents
This presentation examines disparities in health insurance for children with same-sex parents using data from the 2008-2010 American Community Survey (ACS). Gilbert Gonzales found that these disparities diminish when such children live in states with legal same-sex marriage, civil unions, or second-parent adoption.
This presentation examines disparities and trends in health insurance among same-sex couples using data from the 1997-2012 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). Among key findings was that the number of adults in same-sex relationships who were covered by another person’s health plan increased over time.