ANALYSIS OF CHILDREN'S HEALTH INSURANCE PATTERNS:
FINDINGS FROM THE SIPP
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This paper summarizes work using the 1992 panel of the Survey of Income
and Program Participation (SIPP) to provide the most detailed look yet
at the dynamics of health insurance coverage among children and the relationship
between Medicaid eligibility and insurance coverage. We summarize what
our technical work (contained in companion technical appendices A-D) says
on five broad questions:
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How many children lack insurance?
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How long do children remain uninsured?
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What are the patterns of movement between spells with and without insurance?
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What are the characteristics of children by type of health insurance coverage?
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How many fewer uninsured children would there be if participation in Medicaid
were more complete?
We find that from October 1992 to September 1994, between 12.4 and 13.3
percent of children under 19 were uninsured at any one point in time, with
one in four children (27.1 percent) uninsured for some period of time over
the two years. About half of all spells without insurance last less than
six months, but a quarter last 12 months or more. Further, nearly half
of all children uninsured at any one time were already uninsured for 12
months or more.
Among children becoming uninsured, 52 percent were covered by employer-sponsored
coverage in the previous month, 39 percent by Medicaid, and 9 percent by
other sources or were newborns. More than half of the 550,000 children
leaving Medicaid each month (56 percent) became uninsured. But loss of
Medicaid eligibility explains fewer than half these transitions. While
reporting error may explain some of this, our findings highlight the importance
of shifting some attention from studying why children do not enroll in
Medicaid to the question of why children lose Medicaid coverage when they
may still be eligible. This is particularly relevant as our findings highlight
the sensitivity of insurance coverage rates to Medicaid enrollment patterns.
The 1992 SIPP data support previous research on the relationship between
children's insurance status and various demographic and socio-economic
characteristics. The findings highlight how Medicaid eligibility policy
affects the relationships among income, child age, and coverage. They also
highlight the periodic discrepancy between a child's coverage and that
of the parents. About one-fifth of uninsured children appear to have at
least one insured parent, although some of this may be reporting errors.
Children who experience long spells without insurance do not appear strikingly
different from those who experience relatively brief spells, contrary to
what some may expect.
Our data suggest that Medicaid participation rates by children range
from 65 percent to 79 percent, depending on how they are calculated. Simulations
indicate that about one third of the 8.9 million uninsured children in
September 1994 were eligible for Medicaid; some of this group is in transition
to Medicaid, however, and many more were enrolled previously. The findings
also highlight the substantially lower participation rates for children
who are not cash assistance participants. This reinforces the importance
of strong outreach to achieving high levels of CHIP participation and highlights
ways of targeting outreach to reach diverse subsets of children.
In sum, our work suggests that the number of children with some spell
without insurance over time greatly exceeds the number uninsured at any
point in time. The findings highlight the importance of not just enrolling
children in Medicaid or CHIP but also retaining them in the programs. They
also show that, contrary to common perception, Medicaid participation by
eligible children with no other coverage was relatively high before welfare
reform. These rates were lifted by the high proportion of children covered
through cash assistance programs, reinforcing the concern over the potentially
adverse effects of TANF on Medicaid coverage for children.