Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Public Health, The University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
Department of Health, Society, and Behavior, Public Health, University of California, Irvine, California, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2022 Dec;57 Suppl 2(Suppl 2):315-325. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.14061. Epub 2022 Sep 15.
To estimate the effects of Children's Health Insurance Reauthorization Act (CHIPRA), a policy that provided states the option to extend Medicaid/CHIP eligibility to immigrant children who have not been legal residents for five years or more, on insurance coverage, access, utilization, and health outcomes among immigrant children.
Restricted use 2000-2016 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS).
We used a difference-in-differences design that compared changes in CHIPRA expansion states to changes in non-expansion states.
Our sample included immigrant children who were born outside the US, aged 0-18 with family income below 300% of the Federal Poverty Level (FPL). Subgroup analyses were conducted across states that did and did not have a similar state-funded option prior to CHIPRA (state-funded vs. not state-funded), by the length of time in the US (5 years vs. 5-14 years), and global region of birth (Latin American vs. Asian countries).
We found that CHIPRA was associated with a significant 6.35 percentage point decrease in uninsured rates (95% CI: -11.25, -1.45) and an 8.1 percentage point increase in public insurance enrollment for immigrant children (95% CI: 1.26, 14.98). However, the effects of CHIPRA became small and statistically not significant 3 years after adoption. Effects on public insurance coverage were significant in states without state-funded programs prior to CHIPRA (15.50 percentage points; 95% CI:8.05, 22.95) and for children born in Asian countries (12.80 percentage points; 95% CI: 1.04, 24.56). We found no significant changes in health care access and utilization, and health outcomes, overall and across subgroups due to CHIPRA.
CHIPRA's eligibility expansion was associated with increases in public insurance coverage for low-income children, especially in states where CHIPRA represented a new source of coverage versus a substitute for state-funded coverage. However, we found evidence of crowd-out in certain subgroups and no effect of CHIPRA on access to care and health. Our results suggest that public coverage may be an important tool for promoting the well-being of immigrant children but other investments are still needed.
评估《儿童健康保险再授权法案》(CHIPRA)的影响,该法案为各州提供了选择,将符合条件但尚未成为合法居民五年或以上的移民儿童纳入医疗补助/儿童健康保险计划(Medicaid/CHIP),以评估其对移民儿童的保险覆盖范围、获得途径、使用情况和健康结果的影响。
受限使用的 2000-2016 年全国健康访谈调查(NHIS)。
我们采用了差异中的差异设计,比较了 CHIPRA 扩展州与非扩展州的变化。
我们的样本包括出生于美国境外、家庭收入低于联邦贫困水平(FPL)300%的 0-18 岁移民儿童。在有或没有类似的州资助选择(州资助与非州资助)的州,根据在美国的时间长短(5 年与 5-14 年),以及出生的全球地区(拉丁美洲与亚洲国家)进行了亚组分析。
我们发现,CHIPRA 与未参保率显著降低 6.35 个百分点(95%CI:-11.25,-1.45)和公共保险参保率显著增加 8.1 个百分点相关(95%CI:1.26,14.98)。然而,CHIPRA 的影响在实施 3 年后变得较小且统计学上不显著。在 CHIPRA 实施前没有州资助计划的州(15.50 个百分点;95%CI:8.05,22.95)和在亚洲国家出生的儿童(12.80 个百分点;95%CI:1.04,24.56),公共保险覆盖的效果显著。总的来说,我们没有发现 CHIPRA 导致医疗保健获得和使用以及健康结果的显著变化。
CHIPRA 的资格扩大与低收入儿童的公共保险覆盖范围的增加有关,特别是在 CHIPRA 代表新的覆盖来源而不是州资助覆盖的替代来源的州。然而,我们发现了在某些亚组中存在排挤效应的证据,以及 CHIPRA 对获得护理和健康的影响。我们的研究结果表明,公共保险可能是促进移民儿童福祉的重要工具,但仍需要其他投资。