Strategic Planning & Timelines
- 10/07/2013
With health insurance exchanges now open for business, a new report shows stark differences in outreach and enrollment assistance efforts across 10 states. Researchers say states that established their own unique, state-based insurance marketplaces have developed innovative marketing campaigns supported by new programs designed to help consumers navigate the application and enrollment process. In contrast, states that deferred to federally run marketplaces and national outreach efforts may not be supported by the same level of marketing and assistance, and thus may not achieve the same level of enrollment.
- 10/07/2013
Since the passage of the Affordable Care Act, there has been much speculation about how many employers will stop offering health insurance once the act’s major coverage provisions take effect. Some observers predict little aggregate effect, but others believe that 2014 will mark the beginning of the end for our current system of employer-sponsored insurance. This report uses theoretical and empirical evidence to address the question, “How will employers’ offerings of health insurance change under health reform?”
- 09/24/2013
The share of children who were uninsured fell from 9.4 percent in 2011 to 8.9 percent in 2012 — a historic low — due primarily to gains in private coverage. Enrollment in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) among children remained steady, likely in part because of a health reform requirement that states maintain their eligibility rules and procedures for Medicaid and CHIP. The 8.9 percent uninsurance rate among children is more than a quarter below the 1999 level.
- 09/24/2013
The Commonwealth Fund’s Scorecard identifies opportunities for states to improve their health systems for economically disadvantaged populations and provides state benchmarks of achievement. Analyzing 30 indicators of access, prevention and quality, potentially avoidable hospital use, and health outcomes, the Scorecard documents sharp health care disparities among states. Between leading and lagging states, up to a fourfold disparity in performance exists on a range of key health care indicators for low-income populations. If all states could reach the benchmarks set by leading states, an estimated 86,000 fewer people would die prematurely and tens of millions more adults and children would receive timely preventive care.
- 09/24/2013
With the recent release of data from the 2012 American Community Survey (ACS), SHADAC has created reports on state and county health insurance coverage estimates. Each state has an individualized report comparing 2011 coverage estimates with 2012 and examining coverage rates by age, race/ethnicity, citizenship status, education, work experience, and household income. There are several cross-state comparison reports available as well.