BeLue Rhonda, Miranda Patricia Y, Elewonibi Bilikisu Reni, Hillemeier Marianne M
Department of Health Policy and Administration and Demography, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania
Department of Health Policy and Administration and Demography, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania.
Pediatrics. 2014 Aug;134(2):307-14. doi: 10.1542/peds.2013-3337. Epub 2014 Jul 7.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) has the potential to reduce the number of uninsured children in the United States by as much as 40%. The extent to which immigrant families are aware of and interested in obtaining insurance for their children is unclear.
Data from the 2011-2012 National Survey of Children's Health were analyzed to examine differences by immigrant generational status in awareness of children's health insurance options. Adjusted odds ratios (AORs) were calculated for each outcome variable that showed statistical significance by generation status.
Barriers to obtaining insurance for children in immigrant (first- and second-generation) families include awareness of and experience with various health insurance options, perceived costs and benefits of insurance, structural/policy restrictions on eligibility, and lower likelihood of working in large organizations that offer employee insurance coverage. Although noncitizen immigrants are not covered by ACA insurance expansions, only 38% of first-generation families report being uninsured because of the inability to meet citizenship requirements. Most families in this sample also worked for employers with <50 employees, making them less likely to benefit from expansions in employer-based insurance. In multivariate analyses, third-generation families have increased odds of knowing how to enroll in health insurance (AOR 7.1 [3.6-13.0]) and knowing where to find insurance information (AOR 7.7 [3.8-15.4]) compared with first-generation families.
ACA navigators and health services professionals should be aware of potential unique challenges to helping immigrant families negotiate Medicaid expansions and state and federal exchanges.
《患者保护与平价医疗法案》(ACA)有潜力将美国未参保儿童的数量减少多达40%。目前尚不清楚移民家庭对为其子女获取保险的知晓程度和兴趣如何。
对2011 - 2012年全国儿童健康调查的数据进行分析,以研究移民代际状况在儿童健康保险选项知晓方面的差异。针对每个按代际状况显示出统计学显著性的结果变量计算调整后的优势比(AOR)。
移民(第一代和第二代)家庭中为儿童获取保险的障碍包括对各种健康保险选项的知晓和经验、对保险成本和收益的认知、资格方面的结构/政策限制,以及在提供员工保险覆盖的大机构工作的可能性较低。虽然非公民移民不在ACA保险扩展范围内,但只有38%的第一代家庭报告因无法满足公民身份要求而未参保。该样本中的大多数家庭还为员工少于50人的雇主工作,这使得他们从基于雇主的保险扩展中受益的可能性较小。在多变量分析中,与第一代家庭相比,第三代家庭知道如何注册健康保险(AOR 7.1 [3.6 - 13.0])以及知道在哪里找到保险信息(AOR 7.7 [3.8 - 15.4])的几率增加。
ACA导航员和健康服务专业人员应意识到在帮助移民家庭协商医疗补助扩展以及州和联邦医保市场方面可能存在的独特挑战。