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Medical Care Research and Review
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Patterns of Health Insurance Coverage among Rural and Urban Children

Andrew F. Coburn

University of Southern Maine

Timothy D. McBride

University of Missouri at St. Louis

Erika C. Ziller

University of Southern Maine

Despite the potential for the State Children’s Health Insurance Program to improve the health care coverage of rural children, the expansion of public health insurance to children in rural areas may be hampered by a lack of understanding about the patterns of insurance coverage they experience. This study uses the Census Bureau’s 1993-1996 panel of the Survey of Income and Program Participation to evaluate differences in the duration of, and in their entry into and exit from, uninsured spells. While the average duration of newspells was shorter for rural children and most regained coverage quickly, rural children were also more likely than urban children to experience protracted spells of uninsurance. Moreover, rural children were more likely than urban children to move between public and private coverage. These findings have important implications for designing insurance expansion programs and outreach strategies to effectively enroll and retain rural children.

Medical Care Research and Review, Vol. 59, No. 3, 272-292 (2002)
DOI: 10.1177/1077558702059003003


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