Uses data from the National Health Interview Survey to measure changes between 1998 and 2005 in the percentage of families with working adults that have at least one offer of health insurance through an employer
Looking at trends in private employer-based health insurance from 2003 to 2013, this issue brief fin...
Young adults aged 19 to 29 are significantly less likely than those in other age groups to have heal...
This paper uses data from the 1977-78 National Medical Care Expenditures Survey to evaluate five dif...
About 60 percent of married women are in the labor force (U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2002). As a res...
household demand for employer-based health insurance to investigate the set of plan and household ch...
This study provides new estimates of demand for employer-sponsored health insurance, using the 1997–...
Demand for employment-based health insurance has traditionally been treated as an individual rather ...
Demand for employment-based insurance is typically treated as an individual rather than a household ...
Health insurance in the United States is typically acquired through an employer-sponsored program. O...
The notion that healthcare costs in the United States are increasingly burdensome for many families ...
Using the 1996 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, this study estimates a model of household demand fo...
We use the introduction of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) to assess whether t...
Looks at what percentage of people with neither employer-sponsored nor public coverage purchase priv...
Study of the Changing Workforce whose employers offered personal health insurance, this article inve...
We examine whether the decline in the availability of employer-provided health insurance is a phenom...
Looking at trends in private employer-based health insurance from 2003 to 2013, this issue brief fin...
Young adults aged 19 to 29 are significantly less likely than those in other age groups to have heal...
This paper uses data from the 1977-78 National Medical Care Expenditures Survey to evaluate five dif...
About 60 percent of married women are in the labor force (U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2002). As a res...
household demand for employer-based health insurance to investigate the set of plan and household ch...
This study provides new estimates of demand for employer-sponsored health insurance, using the 1997–...
Demand for employment-based health insurance has traditionally been treated as an individual rather ...
Demand for employment-based insurance is typically treated as an individual rather than a household ...
Health insurance in the United States is typically acquired through an employer-sponsored program. O...
The notion that healthcare costs in the United States are increasingly burdensome for many families ...
Using the 1996 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, this study estimates a model of household demand fo...
We use the introduction of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) to assess whether t...
Looks at what percentage of people with neither employer-sponsored nor public coverage purchase priv...
Study of the Changing Workforce whose employers offered personal health insurance, this article inve...
We examine whether the decline in the availability of employer-provided health insurance is a phenom...
Looking at trends in private employer-based health insurance from 2003 to 2013, this issue brief fin...
Young adults aged 19 to 29 are significantly less likely than those in other age groups to have heal...
This paper uses data from the 1977-78 National Medical Care Expenditures Survey to evaluate five dif...