Publication
SHADAC Newsletter - January 2017
The SHADAC newsletter contains updates on SHADAC activities, news from the states, resource updates, and blog highlights. Subscribe to our newsletter here.
The SHADAC newsletter contains updates on SHADAC activities, news from the states, resource updates, and blog highlights. Subscribe to our newsletter here.
The new American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year state and county uninsurance estimates for 2011 to 2015 are now available via a SHADAC clickable map. Users can click a state to access a table of uninsurance estimates for the state and all counties.
Background: The 5-year ACS is created by pooling together five years of ACS data to produce estimates for areas and subgroups with smaller populations, so estimates are available even for counties with a population below 65,000.
SHADAC's State Profiles have been updated to include these 5-year estimates.
In other data news, the SHADAC Data Center has been updated with 2015 estimates from the ACS, the Current Population Survey (CPS); the Behavior Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS); and the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS). Explore the new estimates.
This brief provides an annual update to comparisons of uninsurance estimates from four federal surveys1:
In this brief, we present current and historical national estimates of uininsurance along with the most recent avaialble state-level estimates from these surveys. We also discuss the main reasons for variation in the estimates across the different surveys.
1Another federal survey that provides estimates of the uninsured is the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), which provides uninsurance estimates for non-elderly adults (ages 18 to 64) nationally and among states. Details about the BRFSS are included in Appendix A of the brief, and estimates from the BRFSS are provided in Appendix B.
The American Journal of Public Health recently published an article authored by Lynn A. Blewett (SHADAC), Heather M. Dahlen (Medica Research Institute), Donna Spencer (SHADAC), Julia A. Rivera Drew (Minnesota Population Center), and Elizabeth Lukanen (SHADAC).
The article, “Changes to Design of the National Health Interview Survey to Support Enhanced Monitoring of Health Reform Impacts at the State Level,” reviews recent changes to the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) that support enhanced health reform monitoring. These changes include new questions and response categories, sampling design changes to improve state-level analysis, and enhanced dissemination activities.
Led by Lynn Blewett, the authors discuss the importance of the NHIS and the continued need for state-level analysis. They also make suggestions for future consideration aimed at further strengthening the survey.
The map on this page links to tables containing state and county uninsurance estimates for 2015. These estimates come from the 2015 American Community Survey (ACS) via the U.S. Census Bureau’s American FactFinder (AFF) tool and were released on September 15, 2016. Due to sample size constraints, single-year ACS estimates are available at the county level only for counties with a population greater than 65,000.
Click on a state to see state and county uninsurance rates by characteristics (for example, age, race/ethnicity, and poverty level) for 2015 and comparison year 2014.
Click here to view uninsurance estimates for the United States.
Click here to view uninsurance estimates for Puerto Rico and its municipios.
Note: These tables present uninsured rates, which indicate the share of the population that is uninsured. For example, a 10 percent uninsured rate for adult women indicates that 10 percent of all adult women are uninsured.
Additional Estimates (50-State Comparisons)
Maps & Tables of Private, Public, & Uninsured Change from 2014 to 2015
About the ACS
The ACS is a household survey that began in 2005 and produces annually updated data on a variety of population characteristics, including health insurance coverage. In total, the ACS surveys approximately three million US households each year. An important feature of the ACS is that it includes a large enough sample for state‐level and sub‐state estimates.
The ACS began asking survey respondents about health insurance coverage during the 2008 calendar year. Specifically, the survey asks respondents about current coverage for each person in the respondent’s household. A person is categorized as “insured” if he or she has coverage at the point in time at which the survey is administered.
Why Aren’t Estimates Provided for All Counties?
Due to sample size constraints, single-year ACS estimates are available at the county level only for counties with a population greater than 65,000.
How Are these Estimates Different from the Estimates that SHADAC Publishes Using Census Bureau Micro-Data Files?
Two definitions used by the Census Bureau to generate the tabulations above differ from those that SHADAC uses to generate tabulations for the SHADAC Data Center and the RWJF Data Hub. The definitional differences are as follows:
Family
Family Income