
CONTACT: Charles R. Loebbaka at (847) 491-4887
or at c-loebbaka@northwestern.edu
FOR RELEASE: Immediate
MANY
PARENTS LOSE HEALTH INSURANCE IN THE WAKE OF WELFARE REFORM
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Loss of health insurance,
especially for parents, appears to be an unintended consequence
of welfare reform, according to new findings from the Illinois
Families Study (IFS) at the Northwestern University Institute
for Policy Research.
"We found that parents who played
by the rules of welfare reform by working, being married,
and getting off welfare were less likely to have health insurance.
We also saw a troubling trend towards more parents without coverage,"
says Jane Holl, assistant professor of pediatrics and faculty fellow
at Northwestern's Institute for Health Services Research and Policy
Studies. Holl is principal investigator of the Child Well-Being
component of the IFS and a faculty associate at the Institute for
Policy Research.
There was some good news, however. Holl
reports that "this negative trend was reversed for children,
so it looks like recent efforts to maintain and expand coverage
for children have been fairly successful and should be continued."
The first of the two policy briefs summarizing
the findings draws upon interviews conducted in 1999 and 2000 with
1,363 current and former Illinois welfare recipients. The second
draws upon a subsequent round of interviews conducted in 2001 with
1,183 of the same families to look at trends in coverage for parents
and children over a two-year period.
In 1999-2000, 28 percent of parents who
were off welfare and working did not have health insurance. Fewer
than half of working parents (45 percent) said their employer offered
health insurance either immediately or even after a waiting period.
In contrast, nearly all parents who remained on welfare received
coverage through the Medicaid program.
WELFARE STUDY
Marriage did not appear to improve coverage.
Among married parents, 27 percent were uninsured in 1999-2000, compared
to 18 percent of the unmarried. A higher percentage of married adults
also reported gaps in coverage and longer gaps, compared to the
unmarried sample.
Rates of insurance coverage improved for
children and worsened for parents between 1999-2000 and 2001. The
proportion of adults with no health coverage rose six percentage
points, resulting in 25 percent of parents overall uninsured in
2001, compared to 9 percent of children.
Medicaid remained the most important source
of coverage for these families, although a sharp decline in Medicaid
for these parents between 1999-2000 and 2001 appears to be the primary
cause of decreased coverage for parents, the study reported.
"It looks like outreach campaigns to
expand coverage for low-income children through KidCare and Medicaid
have been somewhat successful in Illinois, said Holl. "Its
now time to turn our attention to the insurance needs of parents.
Hopefully some of the lessons learned from insuring low-income children
can now be applied to their parents."
Among those lessons, the researchers recommend
the following strategies:
- Raise income
eligibility cutoffs for Medicaid, especially for adults
- Expand Transitional
Medicaid Assistance (TMA) beyond 6-12 months
after exit from TANF (the state-based cash assistance program)
- Extend KidCare
(SCHIP) coverage to parents through the FamilyCare
Program
- Encourage
private employers to expand health insurance coverage for
low-income workers
Principal investigator for the Illinois
Families Study is IPR faculty fellow Dan
A. Lewis, professor of education and social policy. The
study's goal is to inform policymakers about how Illinois families
have been faring since welfare reform was implemented. Researchers
from Northwestern, Roosevelt, and Northern Illinois universities,
the University of Illinois at Chicago, and the University of Chicago
are conducting the six-year panel study.
The findings, in policy briefs titled "Welfare
reform and health insurance: How parents lose out" and "Trends
in health insurance coverage: Uneven progress for parents and children
in the wake of welfare reform," are available at www.northwestern.edu/ipr/research/IFS.html.
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