Numerous studies have found that rural residents are more likely to be uninsured than urban residents. This coverage difference is generally due to more limited access for rural workers to employer-sponsored health insurance. Lower wages, and the tendency for rural residents to work for small employers, account for this reduced access. While we have substantial information on static insurance coverage rates for rural residents, our knowledge about how coverage changes with employment transitions is limited. Prior research indicates that loss of a job puts workers at greater risk of becoming uninsured, and there is some evidence that this risk is even greater for rural workers. Other studies suggest that access to health insurance plays an i...
Health insurance literacy is central to identifying eligibility for coverage and subsidies, choosing...
Medicaid expansions through the Affordable Care Act began in January 2014, but we have little inform...
In a landmark series of reports, the Institute of Medicine’s Committee on the Consequences of Uninsu...
Numerous studies have found that rural residents are more likely to be uninsured than urban resident...
More than twenty years of research has demonstrated that rural residents are at greater risk of bein...
Key Findings: A greater percentage of rural residents than urban residents are uninsured, especially...
KEY FINDINGS: Private insurance is less common in rural areas. Rural residents under age 65 are less...
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) Medicaid Expansion allows coverage for all adults aged 18 to 64 with i...
Compares uninsurance rates and insurance deductibles in urban and rural areas. Outlines the healthca...
Following the implementation of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), rural health ...
This study addresses the issue of poor mental health among young to middle-career rural residents an...
In this brief, researchers from the Maine Rural Health Research Center (University of Southern Maine...
This study estimates the propensity of firms to offer health insurance in a simultaneous equation mo...
Rural areas in the United States frequently face difficulties regarding the prevalence of healthcare...
Rural communities in the United States are served by relatively fewer health care professionals than...
Health insurance literacy is central to identifying eligibility for coverage and subsidies, choosing...
Medicaid expansions through the Affordable Care Act began in January 2014, but we have little inform...
In a landmark series of reports, the Institute of Medicine’s Committee on the Consequences of Uninsu...
Numerous studies have found that rural residents are more likely to be uninsured than urban resident...
More than twenty years of research has demonstrated that rural residents are at greater risk of bein...
Key Findings: A greater percentage of rural residents than urban residents are uninsured, especially...
KEY FINDINGS: Private insurance is less common in rural areas. Rural residents under age 65 are less...
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) Medicaid Expansion allows coverage for all adults aged 18 to 64 with i...
Compares uninsurance rates and insurance deductibles in urban and rural areas. Outlines the healthca...
Following the implementation of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), rural health ...
This study addresses the issue of poor mental health among young to middle-career rural residents an...
In this brief, researchers from the Maine Rural Health Research Center (University of Southern Maine...
This study estimates the propensity of firms to offer health insurance in a simultaneous equation mo...
Rural areas in the United States frequently face difficulties regarding the prevalence of healthcare...
Rural communities in the United States are served by relatively fewer health care professionals than...
Health insurance literacy is central to identifying eligibility for coverage and subsidies, choosing...
Medicaid expansions through the Affordable Care Act began in January 2014, but we have little inform...
In a landmark series of reports, the Institute of Medicine’s Committee on the Consequences of Uninsu...