Trends in coverage

Expanding Coverage in States Video

Publication Year: 
2010

Forty-six million Americans, including nine million children, are uninsured, and the problem is growing. To combat this situation, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is working in several areas to accomplish the goal of ensuring that everyone in America has affordable and stable health care coverage.

SHARE Grantee Joel Cantor Quoted in Congressional Quarterly

SHARE grantee Joel Cantor was interviewed recently by Congressional Quarterly for a December 11th story on the broad political appeal of expanding young adult dependent coverage.

November SHARE Newsletter Released

SHARE has released its November newsletter.  Check it out for the latest updates on the activities of SHARE and its grantees.
 
View the November SHARE newsletter.

The Secrets of Massachusetts’ Success: Why 97 Percent of State Residents Have Health Coverage (Issue Brief)

Publication Year: 
2009

In this issue brief (based on a longer report), SHARE grantee Stan Dorn and his research team present preliminary findings from their evaluation of auto-enrollment procedures in Massachusetts.  The researchers use data from interviews with policymakers, stakeholders, advocates, and others, along with a review of published reports, to identify the factors that were important in encouraging, in particular, the enrollment of eligible, low-income uninsured.  Factors identified include: the use of state data rather

SHARE Grantee Michael Cousineau Releases Issue Brief

November 3, 2009.  SHARE grantee Michael Cousineau has released a new issue brief based on his evaluation of outreach and enrollment strategies used to target uninsured children in California who are eligible for-but not enrolled in-public programs.  The brief, "Trends in Child Enrollment in California's Public Health Insurance Programs," is the second in a series of three briefs based on Dr. Cousineau's SHARE-sponsored research.

Achieving Universal Coverage through Comprehensive Reform: The Vermont Experience

Publication Year: 
2009

Principal Investigator Ron Deprez and his research team have released early findings from their SHARE project evaluating health reform outcomes in Vermont.  This issue brief, "Achieving Universal Coverage through Comprehensive Reform: The Vermont Experience," reveals evidence that the percentage of Vermont residents aged 0 to 64 with some type of insurance coverage increased by 2.4% between 2005 and 2008 and that most of this improvement came from increases in public coverage.  The brief provides a summary of key lessons learned from the Vermont health reform experience, emphasizi

SHARE Report: Extending Dependent Coverage to Young Adults to Reduce Uninsurance

October 1, 2009.  Young adults between the ages of 19 and 26 are the more likely than any other age group in the U.S. to lack insurance coverage.  These young adults usually lose insurance as they age out of their parents' insurance plans or graduate from college and then enter a workforce that often does not provide health insurance to its newest workers.  Some insurance plans may continue to provide coverage for this age group under the umbrella of dependent coverage, but under many plans, this group no longer meets the criteria for "eligible dependents." 

Unstable Ground? Comparing Income, Poverty & Health Insurance Estimates from Major National Surveys

Publication Year: 
2009

Michael Davern's presentation at the 2009 AcademyHealth Annual Research Meeting, "Unstable Ground? Comparing Income, Poverty & Health Insurance Estimates from Major National Surveys." June 29, 2009, Chicago IL.

New SHADAC State-by-State Analysis for Cover the Uninsured Week

March 24, 2009. Each spring we work with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) to prepare a report for their Cover the Uninsured Week. Now in its seventh year, the campaign has become the largest nonpartisan mobilization in history seeking solutions for the 45.7 million Americans who are uninsured.

New State-by-State Analysis Released for Cover the Uninsured Week

March 24, 2009.  A new report, "At the Brink: Trends in America’s Uninsured 1994-2007" was released in conjunction with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s (RWJF) Cover the Uninsured Week, March 22-28, 2009. Now in its seventh year, the campaign has become the largest nonpartisan mobilization in history seeking solutions for the 45.7 million Americans who are uninsured. The report, prepared by SHADAC research, chronicles state-by-state health coverage trends, showing that more people go without health coverage as insurance costs outpace income eight-fold.

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