Journal Article The U.S. Economy and Changes in Health Insurance Coverage, 2000-2006
John Holahan, Allison Cook
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The number of uninsured Americans increased by 3.4 million between 2004 and 2006, despite improving economic conditions. In the first four years of the decade, during a period of economic recession, the number increased by 6.0 million. The dominant factor in both periods was a decline in employer-sponsored insurance coverage. Although the recent decline was less than that experienced from 2000 to 2004, growth in public coverage was small, and the number of uninsured people increased by 1.0 million children and 2.4 million adults. Employer coverage declined most for self-employed or small-firm workers, in the South, and among noncitizens.
Research and Evidence Health Policy Family and Financial Well-Being
Expertise Health Care Coverage, Costs, and Access Reproductive and Maternal Health Aging, Medicare, and Long-Term Care Early Childhood
Tags Health insurance Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program  State Children's Health Insurance Program Children's health and development Children and youth