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Medical Care Research and Review
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Continuity of Health Insurance Coverage and Perceived Health at Age 40

Janice C. Probst

University of South Carolina

Jong-Yi Wang

China Medical University, Taiwan

Charity G. Moore

University of Pittsburgh

M. Paige Powell

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Amy Brock Martin

University of South Carolina

While a lack of health insurance or interrupted coverage has been shown to lead to poorer health status among preretirement populations, this phenomenon has not been examined among a large population of younger, working-age adults. We analyzed a nationally representative data set of persons born between 1957 and 1961, the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth—1979, to examine the links between insurance continuity and self-assessed physical and mental health at age 40. Among respondents turning 40 in 1998 or 2000, 59.8% had been continuously insured during the decade before they reached age 40. In unadjusted analysis, persons who were continuously covered had the highest scores for both physical and mental health. After controlling for respondent characteristics, insurance coverage was not significantly associated with perceived physical or mental health.

Key Words: health insurance coverage • physical health status • mental health status • minority health

This version was published on August 1, 2008

Medical Care Research and Review, Vol. 65, No. 4, 450-477 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1077558708317759


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