miércoles, 5 de abril de 2017

STATISTICAL BRIEF #501: Children's Usual Source of Care: Insurance, Income, and Racial/Ethnic Disparities, 2004-2014

STATISTICAL BRIEF #501: Children's Usual Source of Care: Insurance, Income, and Racial/Ethnic Disparities, 2004-2014

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AHRQ Stats: Medical Care for Children

In 2014, approximately 8 percent of U.S. children younger than 18 (about 5.8 million children) were reported as not having a usual source of care. (Source: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Statistical Brief #501: Children's Usual Source of Care: Insurance, Income, and Racial/Ethnic Disparities, 2004-2014.)

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Medical Expenditure Panel Survey

STATISTICAL BRIEF #501:
Children's Usual Source of Care: Insurance, Income, 

and Racial/Ethnic Disparities, 2004-2014


March 2017
Naomi Zewde, PhD and Terceira Berdahl, PhD

Highlights

  • A usual source of medical care was unavailable to 5.8 million children (7.9 percent of children ages 0-17) in 2014.
  • Children who were uninsured were more likely to have no usual source of care in each year between 2004 and 2014.
  • Children living in poor families were more likely to lack a usual source of care compared to children living in high-income families in both 2004 and 2014.
  • Children from high-income families were less likely than children in any other income group to lack a usual source of care in 2014.
  • The percentage of Hispanic children without a usual source of care declined by 4 percentage points between 2004 and 2014.

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