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

CBO: End of ACA subsidies would mean short-term exit of insurers
MDedge Internal Medicine
Be alert for embezzlement
MDedge Internal Medicine
Physicians shift on support of single-payer system
MDedge Internal Medicine
Antimicrobial development model links financial incentives with public health needs
MDedge Internal Medicine
Studies backing certain FDA approvals found lacking
MDedge Internal Medicine
Insurance coverage gainers outnumber coverage losers
MDedge Internal Medicine
Safety issues not that unusual in medical offices
MDedge Internal Medicine
Mental health courts: Is recidivism what counts?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Fixing the ACA: 11 practical solutions
MDedge Internal Medicine
Five outside-the-box ideas for fixing the individual insurance market
MDedge Internal Medicine

Related Articles