Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Volume 8, Issue 1, 2006, Pages 1-9

The enigma of higher income immigrants with lower rates of health insurance coverage in the United States (Article)

Bass E.*
  • a James A. Haley VAMC, VISN 8 Patient Safety Center of Inquiry, 11605 North Nebraska Avenue, Tampa, FL 33612, United States

Abstract

This research compares rates of health insurance coverage among middle-class non-elderly immigrants to native-born American adults using data from the March 1996-2000 Supplements to the Current Population Survey. Probit regressions reveal that immigrants were three times as likely to be uninsured at income levels exceeding $50,000, controlling for economic, demographic and immigrant-related characteristics. Work-related characteristics, income, martial status and nativity considerably influened health insurance status for all adults, but work-related factors had the strongest effect on immigrants' rates of coverage. Why, ceteris paribus, immigrants have lower coverage rates is unclear. Many low-income and recent immigrants face barriers to access due to legal status or job sector. But lower rates of health insurance coverage which persist among long-time residents at higher income levels cannot be explained by such barriers, a finding highly relevant for policy makers. Encouraging uninsured immigrants to opt into health plans voluntarily will remain a challenge. © 2006 Springer Science + Business Media, Inc.

Author Keywords

Uninsured Health insurance immigrants

Index Keywords

statistical analysis immigrant medically uninsured health care policy demography health insurance human immigration Insurance Coverage middle aged Medicare controlled study priority journal Marital Status Insurance, Health statistical significance United States income social status Humans health economics male Emigrants and Immigrants female population distribution socioeconomics Article adult health survey

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-31144462793&doi=10.1007%2fs10903-006-6337-6&partnerID=40&md5=09a5bc94294c7e5da51be6e30289f39d

DOI: 10.1007/s10903-006-6337-6
ISSN: 15571912
Cited by: 2
Original Language: English