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Publications by Fredric Blavin for Health Policy Center

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More about Fredric Blavin's areas of expertise can be found on this Urban Institute expert's page.


Viewing 1-9 of 9. Most recent listed first.

Dynamics In Medicaid And SCHIP Eligibility Among Children In SCHIP's Early Years (Article)
Author(s): Anna S. Sommers, Lisa Dubay, Linda J. Blumberg, Fredric Blavin, John L. Czajka

Two-thirds of children in the United States were income-eligible for Medicaid or the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) at some point from 1996 to 2000. One in five children were income-eligible for both programs, and 73 percent of children ever eligible for SCHIP were eligible at other times for Medicaid. As SCHIP is reauthorized, Congress will need to give states the tools and financial commitment to assure that uninsured children are enrolled in and retain the coverage for which they are eligible.

Posted: April 14, 2008Availability: HTML

Toward Universal Coverage in Massachusetts (Article)
Author(s): Linda J. Blumberg, John Holahan, Alan Weil, Lisa Clemans-Cope, Matthew Buettgens, Fredric Blavin, Stephen Zuckerman

This paper presents several options designed to help the Commonwealth of Massachusetts move to universal health insurance coverage. The alternatives all build upon a common base that includes an expansion of the Medicaid program, income-related tax credits, a purchasing pool, and government-sponsored reinsurance. These measures in themselves would not yield universal coverage, nor would an employer mandate by itself. We show that an individual mandate, and an employer mandate combined with an individual mandate, both would yield universal coverage with a relatively small increase in government costs relative to state gross domestic product and current health spending.

Posted: April 14, 2008Availability: HTML

Medicaid and SCHIP Coverage: Findings from California and North Carolina (Research Report)
Author(s): Genevieve M. Kenney, Jamie Rubenstein, Anna S. Sommers, Stephen Zuckerman, Fredric Blavin

This article examines experiences under Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), drawing on surveys of over 3,000 enrollees in California and North Carolina in 2002. In both States, Medicaid enrollees were less likely than SCHIP enrollees to have parents who were covered by employer-sponsored insurance (ESI). With the exception of dental care and provider perceptions, access experiences were fairly comparable across the two programs, despite differences in the characteristics of the children served by the two programs. Relative to being uninsured, Medicaid enrollment was found to improve access to care along a number of different dimensions, controlling for other factors. Furthermore, this study emphasizes the need for continued evaluation of access to care for both programs.

Posted: February 01, 2008Availability: HTML | PDF

The Experiences of SCHIP Enrollees and Disenrollees in 10 States (Research Report)
Author(s): Genevieve M. Kenney, Christopher Trenholm, Lisa Dubay, Myoung Kim, Lorenzo Moreno, Jamie Rubenstein, Anna S. Sommers, Stephen Zuckerman, William Black, Fredric Blavin, Grace Ko

Congress mandated in the Balanced Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (BBRA) that the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services conduct an independent comprehensive study of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). This report presents the findings from the mandated surveys of SCHIP enrollees and disenrollees in 10 states (conducted during 2002). SCHIP programs were found to provide health coverage to the population SCHIP was intended to serve, primarily children who would otherwise have been uninsured. The programs availed enrollees of needed primary and other health care services, and were found to have a positive impact on enrollees' access to health care services, leaving enrollees with fewer unmet needs than they would have had in the absence of SCHIP. Families were satisfied with the ease of enrolling children, many of whom remained enrolled for 12 months, depending on the state.

Posted: December 05, 2007Availability: HTML | PDF

Effects of Public Premiums on Children's Health Insurance Coverage (Research Report)
Author(s): Fredric Blavin, Genevieve M. Kenney, Jack Hadley

This study uses 2000 to 2004 Current Population Survey data to examine the effects of public premiums on the insurance coverage of children whose family incomes are between 100% and 300% of the federal poverty level. The analysis employs multinomial logistic models that control for factors other than premium costs. While the magnitude of the estimated effects varies across models, the results consistently indicate that raising public premiums reduces enrollment in public programs, with some children who forgo public coverage having private coverage instead and others being uninsured. The results indicate that public premiums have larger effects when applied to lower-income families.
Inquiry, Volume 43, Number 4 (Winter 2006/2007): 345-361.

Posted: June 27, 2007Availability: HTML

High-Deductible Health Plans with Health Savings Accounts: Emerging Evidence and Outstanding Issues (State Report)
Author(s): Lisa Clemans-Cope, Fredric Blavin, Genevieve M. Kenney

This study lays out both advantages and disadvantages of the use of high deductible plans (HDHPs) with Health Savings Accounts (HSA). It touches on why this solution may exacerbate risk selection issues that already seem to be present in Missouri. It also discusses how these plans can be a somewhat better deal for a large swath of the population that is younger and healthier but only at some cost.

Posted: July 05, 2006Availability: HTML | PDF

Roadmap to Coverage (Research Report)
Author(s): John Holahan, Linda J. Blumberg, Alan Weil, Lisa Clemans-Cope, Matthew Buettgens, Fredric Blavin, Stephen Zuckerman

This report synthesizes all of the research and analytic work done on the Roadmap initiative, describes three policy approaches that would achieve universal health coverage in the Commonwealth, and describes the issues that would need to be addressed in order to implement the Roadmap options. The report describes each of the building blocks in turn, followed by the mandate alternatives. The cost and coverage estimates were produced using the Health Insurance Reform Simulation Model, developed by Urban Institute researchers. The report also discusses options for financing the coverage expansions, the likely benefits from universal coverage, and the broader economic impacts.

Posted: May 15, 2006Availability: HTML | PDF

Building the Roadmap to Coverage: Policy Choices and the Cost and Coverage Implications (Research Report)
Author(s): Linda J. Blumberg, John Holahan, Alan Weil, Lisa Clemans-Cope, Matthew Buettgens, Fredric Blavin, Stephen Zuckerman

This report presents several options designed to help Massachusetts move to universal health insurance coverage. Each strategy is outlined in the form of a policy proposal and includes analysis of the effects on cost and coverage. The policies all build on an expansion of MassHealth, income-related tax credits, a purchasing pool and government-sponsored reinsurance. These measures in themselves do not yield universal coverage, nor would an employer mandate. The building blocks and an employer mandate combined with an individual mandate would yield universal coverage with a relatively small increase in government costs relative to state GDP and current health spending. (www.roadmaptocoverage.com, June 21, 2005)

Posted: May 12, 2006Availability: HTML

Lowering Financial Burdens and Increasing Health Insurance Coverage for Those with High Medical Costs (Policy Briefs/Health Policy Briefs)
Author(s): Linda J. Blumberg, Lisa Clemans-Cope, Fredric Blavin

Mounting empirical evidence, policy research, and reports in the popular press attest that the U.S. health care system is currently inadequate to ensure access to care for those with the greatest health care needs. This brief shows that low-income adults with high health costs and employer-sponsored health insurance spend 10 percent of their income on out-of-pocket expenses; those with non-group coverage spend at least double that figure. We describe three options for subsidizing health care coverage for high-cost, high-risk populations. Low-income subsidies could further reduce the cost of care and coverage for people of modest means.

Posted: December 19, 2005Availability: HTML | PDF

 

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