News from the FDA/CDC

Young adults lead the ranks of recently insured


 

The uninsured rate for young adults fell 50% from 2010 to 2016, according to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

In the first quarter of 2010, 30.6% of adults aged 18-29 years did not have health insurance at the time they were interviewed for the National Health Interview Survey. By the last quarter of 2016, that figure was down to 15.4%, a drop of nearly 50%, the AHRQ said in its annual National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report.

Uninsured Americans aged 0-64 years, 2010-2016 by quarter
The reductions for Americans younger and older were robust but not as large. Among adults aged 30-64 years, the proportion who were uninsured fell almost 36%, going from 18.2% in the first quarter of 2010 to 11.7% in the last quarter of 2016. Children had the smallest reduction by age group, 24%, as their uninsured rate decreased from 7.4% to 5.6%, the AHRQ reported.

For the total population under age 65 years, the uninsured rate dropped from 17.5% in the first quarter of 2010 to 10.8% in the fourth quarter of 2016, the AHRQ said, for an overall decline of 38%.

Recommended Reading

The tyranny of E&M reimbursement cuts with same-day procedures
MDedge Dermatology
Morning rituals
MDedge Dermatology
Physicians shift on support of single-payer system
MDedge Dermatology
Antimicrobial development model links financial incentives with public health needs
MDedge Dermatology
Videodermoscopy as a Novel Tool for Dermatologic Education
MDedge Dermatology
Consulting for the dead
MDedge Dermatology
Safety issues not that unusual in medical offices
MDedge Dermatology
Fixing the ACA: 11 practical solutions
MDedge Dermatology
50 years of pediatric dermatology
MDedge Dermatology
Five outside-the-box ideas for fixing the individual insurance market
MDedge Dermatology

Related Articles