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1.
Am J Public Health ; 88(3): 445-7, 1998 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9518979

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: This study estimated the number of uninsured children in 1993 who were eligible for Medicaid. METHODS: Data from the March 1990 and 1994 Current Population Surveys were analyzed. RESULTS: At least 2.3 million Medicaid-eligible children were uninsured in 1993. These children were more likely to have a working parent than children on Medicaid. Higher proportions of uninsured children less than 6 years of age, children who lived in female-headed single-parent families, and African-American and Hispanic children were eligible for Medicaid. CONCLUSIONS: Many eligible children do not enroll in Medicaid, and they differ in specific ways from enrolled children.


Subject(s)
Eligibility Determination , Medicaid/statistics & numerical data , Medically Uninsured/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Child , Female , Humans , Infant , Insurance, Health/statistics & numerical data , Male , Socioeconomic Factors , United States
2.
Public Health Rep ; 110(1): 27-34, 1995.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7838940

ABSTRACT

The Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) provides supplemental food, nutrition and health education, and social services referral to pregnant, breastfeeding, and post-partum women, and their infants and young children who are both low-income and at nutritional risk. A number of statistically controlled evaluations that compared prenatal women who received WIC services with demographically similar women who did not receive WIC services have found WIC enrollment associated with decreased levels of low birth weight among enrolled women's infants. Several also have found lower overall maternal and infant hospital costs among women who had received prenatal WIC services compared with similar women who did not receive prenatal WIC services. A meta-analysis of the studies shows that providing WIC benefits to pregnant women is estimated to reduce low birth weight rates 25 percent and reduce very low birth weight births by 44 percent. Using these data to estimate costs, prenatal WIC enrollment is estimated to have reduced first year medical costs for U.S. infants by $1.19 billion in 1992. Savings from a reduction in estimated Medicaid expenditures in the first year post-partum more than offset the cost of the Federal prenatal WIC Program. Even using more conservative assumptions, providing prenatal WIC benefits was cost-beneficial. Because of the estimated program cost-savings, the U.S. General Accounting Office has recommended that all pregnant women at or below 185 percent of Federal poverty level be eligible for the program.


Subject(s)
Cost Savings/statistics & numerical data , Food Services/economics , Infant, Low Birth Weight , Prenatal Care/economics , Public Assistance/economics , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Female , Health Care Costs , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Pregnancy , State Government , United States
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