Where are the nation’s uninsured kids? Everywhere
- Share via
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.
For a checkup of the nation’s healthcare as a whole, perhaps we should look to its children. In the U.S., one in nine of them are uninsured, a new report says, with most coming from working families.
Using Census Bureau data, the nonprofit organization Families USA has released a state-by-state look at uninsured children in the U.S. The report represents three years of data -- 2005, 2006 and 2007 -- and thus doesn’t take into account the recent economic tremors, the authors point out.
California alone has more than 1.2 million uninsured kids (12.5% of the state’s total), making it No. 2 in the nation in sheer numbers. It’s behind only Texas, with 1.4 million uninsured kids (20.5% of its total).
Here’s the full report.
And here’s a Times package looking at the compromises three families have made for health insurance:
On the cutoff’s cusp: Hard choices on healthcare
Even with employer’s coverage, a family worries
For one mother, pay gains mean an insurance loss
-- Tami Dennis