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Thousands of U.S. kids lack adequate health insurance, Pitt study finds

A new study by University of Pittsburgh found that inadequate employer-sponsored health plans drove rising rates of underinsurance among children in the years leading up to the pandemic.

P.J. Parmar examines Johnny Lun Ring at the Mango House clinic in Aurora, Colo., on June 24, 2021. His father, Khang Pang (right), a Kachin Rawang refugee, is a pastor of one of the churches that meets at Mango House. The clinic caters primarily to refugees and turns no one away, regardless of their ability to pay. Parmar designed the clinic to survive on the Medicaid payments that many doctors across the U.S. reject as too low.
P.J. Parmar examines Johnny Lun Ring at the Mango House clinic in Aurora, Colo., on June 24, 2021. His father, Khang Pang (right), a Kachin Rawang refugee, is a pastor of one of the churches that meets at Mango House. The clinic caters primarily to refugees and turns no one away, regardless of their ability to pay. Parmar designed the clinic to survive on the Medicaid payments that many doctors across the U.S. reject as too low.Read moreRoss Taylor / MCT

A third of children in the United States had unreliable or insufficient health insurance in the years leading up to the COVID-19 pandemic — a problem to which the public health emergency has drawn even more attention.

The portion of children who were underinsured rose from 30% in 2016 to 34% in 2019, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine published in the journal Pediatrics. Being “underinsured” means you have health insurance, but it is too expensive to use, for instance because of a high deductible that requires you to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket before the plan begins to cover a greater portion of costs. Families covered by private, employer-sponsored health plans and those who earned too much to qualify for publicly funded Medicaid experienced the most trouble affording health care with their insurance, according to the study.

“There’s this perception that if you have a decent job and you have employer based insurance you’re all set. That’s just obviously not the case,” said Justin Yu, an assistant professor of pediatrics at Pitt’s School of Medicine and the study’s lead author.

» READ MORE: Medicaid enrollment soars as Americans lose jobs to pandemic: ‘I never thought I’d experience this’

As of 2019, nearly 1.5 million kids in Pennsylvania and New Jersey lacked adequate and continuous health insurance, according to Yu’s research. The study used data from the National Survey of Children’s Health, which tracks health information about children from birth through age 17.

In New Jersey, the underinsured rate remained fairly steady during the three-year study period, with almost 34% of children underinsured in 2019.

A smaller portion of Pennsylvania children were without adequate health insurance, but the underinsured rate rose more significantly, by nearly 8 percentage points, to 31% in 2019.

Researchers attributed the increase in underinsured children to rising out-of-pocket costs associated with private health plans. The average deductible for single coverage under an employer sponsored health plan is $1,669 in 2021, a 68% increase over the past decade, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation’s employer survey. Co-pays, premiums, and prescription drug costs have become a major financial strain for families whose household income has not kept up with inflation.

Meanwhile Medicaid, a publicly funded program for low-income families, has fewer out-of-pocket costs. People covered by Medicaid were less likely to experience inadequate insurance, according to the Pitt study.

Pennsylvania has a particularly robust Medicaid program and does not have an income limit for CHIP (Children’s Health Insurance Program), said Kari King, CEO of Pennsylvania Partnership for Children, a children’s health advocacy organization.

The program is a valuable option for families who earn too much for Medicaid and feel unable to afford private insurance to ensure that at least their children are covered, she said. The amount families pay for CHIP coverage varies depending on income, with higher-earning families paying more.

Medicaid enrollment has soared during the pandemic, as people who lost jobs became newly eligible for coverage.

“With the pandemic, Medicaid in particular has really stepped in to be that point of coverage as people lost their employment … to be part of how families weather the storm,” said King.

The pandemic has demonstrated how valuable Medicaid is and, Yu hopes, will motivate lawmakers to make publicly funded health care more widely available for children.

Medicaid enrollment has remained high during the pandemic in part because as a condition of receiving federal relief funding, states were prohibited from requiring people to periodically renew their eligibility or disenrolling them.

Consumer advocates are concerned that families could lose coverage if they are not aware they need to renew their eligibility when the public health emergency is over and states can resume their renewal process. They have urged states to comb through their Medicaid rolls slowly and carefully.

“Smaller things can be done on a state-by-state basis to make the process easier,” such as improving community outreach and simplifying the application process, Yu said. “But for the biggest solutions, politicians need to make this something at the forefront of the conversation for society to say, ‘Yes, it is unacceptable that a third of the children are uninsured.’”