Prospects for Expanding Health Insurance Coverage
- 15 March 2001
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 344 (11) , 847-852
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm200103153441113
Abstract
It should be a no-brainer. Every citizen of the most prosperous nation in the world should have basic health insurance. Yet lack of health insurance remains one of the most glaring examples of how the United States differs from other countries.1,2 Despite a robust economy, the number of uninsured nonelderly persons increased steadily in the 1990s, reaching 43.9 million in 1998 before dropping slightly in 1999, to 42.1 million (Figure 1).3 This welcome decline in the number of uninsured persons, however, offers no guarantee that the overall trend has changed. Health care costs and insurance premiums are once again . . .Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Controlling Health Care ExpendituresNew England Journal of Medicine, 2001
- Unmet Health Needs of Uninsured Adults in the United StatesJAMA, 2000
- Insuring the UninsuredJAMA, 2000
- Primary Care Safety-Net Delivery Sites in the United StatesJAMA, 2000
- The Republican and Democratic Candidates Speak on Health CareNew England Journal of Medicine, 2000
- Gaining and Losing Health Insurance: Strengthening the Evidence for Effects on Access to Care and Health OutcomesMedical Care Research and Review, 2000
- Job-based health insurance in 2000: premiums rise sharply while coverage grows.Health Affairs, 2000
- Managed care and physicians' provision of charity care.JAMA, 1999
- Trends: A Changing Picture Of Uncompensated CareHealth Affairs, 1997
- The Medically Uninsured — Will They Always Be with Us?New England Journal of Medicine, 1996