Will uninsured people volunteer for voluntary health insurance? Experience from Washington State.
- 1 April 1996
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 86 (4) , 529-532
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.86.4.529
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: In national and local discussions of health care reform, there is disagreement about whether a national health insurance plan should be mandatory or voluntary. This study describes characteristics of low- income people who were more likely or less likely to be covered by a voluntary plan. METHODS: Survey data were available from an evaluation of Washington State's Basic Health Plan, which offered subsidized health insurance to low-income residents. For those subjects who were eligible and uninsured at baseline, those who joined were compared with those who did not join on a variety of demographic and health-related characteristics. RESULTS: There were substantial differences between those who did and did not join the Basic Health Plan. Those who did not enroll were generally less well-off, with less education, lower income, and worse health. Many had never had health insurance. CONCLUSIONS: If health care reform results in a voluntary plan, additional measures may be needed to ensure that less advantaged citizens have adequate access to health care.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Who Enrolled in a State Program for the UninsuredMedical Care, 1993
- Health Status and Use of Services Among Families With and Without Health InsuranceMedical Care, 1992
- Washington State's Basic Health Plan: choices and challenges.1992
- I. State Report-: Lessons From Implementation Of Washington's Basic Health PlanHealth Affairs, 1992
- Washington State's Basic Health Plan: Choices and ChallengesJournal of Public Health Policy, 1992
- Estimating county percentages of people without health insurance.1991