Artiga et al., 2006 |
Low income newly-covered Utah Medicaid beneficiaries in a limited program and existing enrollees who experienced increased cost-sharing in 2002, age 21–64 |
Descriptive study using data from telephone survey of a representative random sample (N=737) of beneficiaries |
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Briesacher et al., 2009 |
Adults age 51+ with incomes below 100% FPL and/or who are Medicaid beneficiaries |
Descriptive comparison of spending patterns of low-income adults using spending data from the Health and Retirement Study, longitudinal panel survey since 1992 |
Those with Medicaid allocated a larger share of their total resources (85%) to basic living expenses than did similar households without Medicaid
Medication costs accounted for the largest proportion of health care expenses
After paying for basic needs and health care costs, households had an average of $16 left each week
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Selden et al., 2009 |
Low-income families (N=7,885, 80% <150% FPL) with publicly insured children |
Descriptive study using MEPS data from 2003–2004; authors developed various cost-sharing scenarios and estimated presence of high financial burden (defined as >10% of disposable income spent on health care costs) |
Because of other family health care spending, in zero cost-sharing scenario prevalence of high burden is 12.7% in families with publicly insured children
Increased prevalence of high financial burden in these families (21.5%) in lowest cost-sharing scenarios, while the highest scenario increased prevalence to 27.7%
Prevalence of high financial burden was highest in the poorest families (those at <100% of FPL)
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Solotaroff et al., 2005 |
Oregon Health Plan Medicaid beneficiaries age 19–64 affected by increased cost-sharing in 2003 |
Descriptive analysis of mailed survey sent to stratified random sample of adults (n=1,374) affected by change in OHP Standard Plan |
Substantial percentages (from a quarter to almost half depending on the subgroup) reported inability to meet food budgets because of medical expenses
Chronically ill were significantly more likely than others to report difficulties in balancing medical care costs with other needs
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