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Kate Nordahl Assistant Commissioner Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care for Communities of Color Presentation for the Health Disparities Council. Kate Nordahl Assistant Commissioner Division of Health Care Finance and Policy . Presentation Overview. Who are the uninsured? Uninsurance rates by race/ethnicity and age

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Kate Nordahl Assistant Commissioner Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

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  1. Health Insurance Coverage and Access to Care for Communities of ColorPresentation for the Health Disparities Council Kate Nordahl Assistant Commissioner Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  2. Presentation Overview • Who are the uninsured? • Uninsurance rates by race/ethnicity and age • Type of insurance coverage by race/ethnicity and age • Access to and use of care • Usual source of care • Doctors visit in past 12 months • ER visit in past 12 months • Barriers to care due to cost

  3. Uninsurance Uninsurance Ratefor All Massachusetts Residents Uninsurance was low among Massachusetts residents, with less than 3% (167,300 people) uninsured at the time of the survey (summer 2008). Source: Urban Institute tabulations on the 2008 Massachusetts HIS Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  4. Who are the Uninsured? • More likely to be: • Male (57% of the uninsured are male vs. 48.2% in general population) • Young adult - 19 to 25 years of age (32.1% vs. 15.2%) • Hispanic (18.8% vs. 6.8%) • Non-citizen (14.5% vs. 4.6%) • Low-income • <150% FPL (45.1% vs. 20.2%) • 151-299% FPL (33.9% vs. 18.7%) • With less formal education • Less than high school (12.0% vs. 3.9%) • High school graduate or GED (55.6% vs. 40.0%) • Non-working or working only part-time • If work, work for a small sized firm (<51 employees) and for a firm that doesn’t offer employer-sponsored insurance (ESI)

  5. Uninsurance Uninsurance Rates by Race/Ethnicity, All Ages Hispanic residents were most likely to go without coverage in Massachusetts, with an uninsurance rate more than twice as high as other non-Hispanic groups (7.2% versus less than 3%). Source: Urban Institute tabulations on the 2008 Massachusetts HIS Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  6. Uninsurance Uninsurance Rates of Non-Elderly Adults (ages 19-64) by Race/Ethnicity Uninsurance was highest among non-elderly Hispanic adults in Massachusetts, with an uninsurance rate roughly three times that of other, non-Hispanic groups. Source: Urban Institute tabulations on the 2008 Massachusetts HIS Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  7. Uninsurance Uninsurance Rates of Children (<18) by Race/Ethnicity Uninsurance was highest among Hispanic children in Massachusetts, with 2.6% uninsured. Note: there was not large enough sample size to report Black, non-Hispanic and Asian, non-Hispanic separately Source: Urban Institute tabulations on the 2008 Massachusetts HIS Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  8. Type of Coverage Type of Health Insurance Coverage* by Race/Ethnicity, All Ages Employer-sponsored insurance was more common among white, non-Hispanic residents of Massachusetts (71%) than among other race, non-Hispanic or Hispanic residents (63% and 45%, respectively). *Insurance coverage is based on the hierarchy: Medicare, employer-sponsored insurance, public or other coverage. Public and other coverage are combined because of the survey respondents’ difficulties in reporting type of coverage. For lower-income residents, public or other coverage is mostly MassHealth or Commonwealth Care, while for higher-income residents it is non-group coverage and, to a lesser extent, Commonwealth Choice. Source: Urban Institute tabulations on the 2008 Massachusetts HIS Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  9. Type of Coverage Type of Health Insurance Coverage* of Non-Elderly Adults by Race/Ethnicity Employer-sponsored coverage was most common among white, non-Hispanic adults (83%), compared to other race, non-Hispanic adults (73%) and Hispanic adults (54%). *Insurance coverage is based on the hierarchy: Medicare, employer-sponsored insurance, public or other coverage. Public and other coverage are combined because of the survey respondents’ difficulties in reporting type of coverage. For lower-income residents, public or other coverage is mostly MassHealth or Commonwealth Care, while for higher-income residents it is non-group coverage and, to a lesser extent, Commonwealth Choice. Source: Urban Institute tabulations on the 2008 Massachusetts HIS Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  10. Type of Coverage Type of Health Insurance Coverage* of Children by Race/Ethnicity Employer-sponsored coverage was most common among non-Hispanic, white children (79%), compared to other race, non-Hispanic children (56%) and Hispanic children (42%). *Insurance coverage is based on the hierarchy: Medicare, employer-sponsored insurance, public or other coverage. Public and other coverage are combined because of the survey respondents’ difficulties in reporting type of coverage. For lower-income residents, public or other coverage is mostly MassHealth or Commonwealth Care, while for higher-income residents it is non-group coverage and, to a lesser extent, Commonwealth Choice. Source: Urban Institute tabulations on the 2008 Massachusetts HIS Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  11. Non-Elderly Adults Non-Elderly Adults with a Usual Source of Care by Race/Ethnicity Other, non-Hispanic adults were less likely to have a usual source of care than white adults and adults reporting other race/ethnicities. Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  12. Non-Elderly Adults Non-Elderly Adults with a Usual Source of Care by Insurance Status Compared with the insured, uninsured non-elderly adults were much less likely to have a usual source of care (42% versus 91%). Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  13. Children Children with a Usual Source of Care by Race/Ethnicity Hispanic children were least likely to have a usual source of care, compared to other race/ethnicity groups. Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  14. Non-Elderly Adults Non-Elderly Adults with a Doctor Visit in Past 12 Months by Race/Ethnicity Among non-elderly adults, those who reported other, non-Hispanic race/ethni-cities were less likely than white, non-Hispanic or Hispanic adults to have had any doctor visits or a preventive care visit. Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  15. Children Children with a Doctor Visit in Past 12 Months by Race/Ethnicity Hispanic and other, non-Hispanic children were less likely than white, non-Hispanic children to have had any doctor visit or a preventive care visit in the past 12 months. Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  16. Non-Elderly Adults Non-Elderly Adults with an ER Visit in the Past 12 Months by Race/Ethnicity Among non-elderly adults, Hispanics were much more likely to have had an ER visit overall and an ER visit for a non-emergency than other race/ethnicity groups. *A non-emergency ER visit is one that the respondent says could have been treated by a regular doctor if one had been available. Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  17. Children Children with an ER Visit in the Past 12 Months by Race/Ethnicity Hispanic children were much more likely than non-Hispanic children to have had an emergency or non-emergency ER visit. *A non-emergency ER visit is one that the respondent says could have been treated by a regular doctor if one had been available. Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  18. Non-Elderly Adults Non-Elderly Adults Not Getting Needed Care Due to Cost in Past 12 Months by Race/Ethnicity Among non-elderly adults, one-quarter of white, non-Hispanic adults skipped needed health care due to cost, compared with 29% of other, non-Hispanic adults and 35% of Hispanic adults. Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  19. Children Children Not Getting Needed Care Due to Cost in Past 12 Months by Race/Ethnicity Unmet need for health care due to cost was highest for Hispanic children, at 22%. Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  20. Non-Elderly Adults Non-Elderly Adults in Families with Problems Paying Medical Bills in Past 12 Months by Race/Ethnicity Among non-elderly adults, black, non-Hispanics were more likely to report problems paying medical bills than were white, non-Hispanic adults. Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  21. Children Children in Families with Problems Paying Medical Bills in Past 12 Months by Race/Ethnicity Other, non-Hispanic and Hispanic children were most likely to live in families that had trouble paying medical bills (22%). Source: 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy

  22. Summary • While Massachusetts has made great strides to reduce uninsurance and improve access to care the Hispanic population is more likely to: • be uninsured • use the emergency department in the past 12 months • have sought care in the ER for a non-emergency • have not sought needed care due to cost • The Hispanic, non-elderly adult population is less likely to have a usual source of care • In addition, Black, non-Hispanic non-elderly adults were more likely to: • have not sought needed care due to cost • have problems paying medical bills

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