Many Middle-Aged Residents Lost Health Coverage During Recession

Many Middle-Aged Residents Lost Health Coverage During Recession

More middle-aged Californians lost health insurance coverage between 2007 and 2009 than any other group, according to a new study from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

If you’re middle-aged in California, you’re more likely to have lost job-related health care benefits during the recession and you’re part of a burgeoning group of uninsured in the state, according to a new study from researchers at UC-Los Angeles.

The new data on the uninsured can be an important tool for health care policymakers in California, the study’s lead author said.

“When you care about whether the efforts of health care reform are equitably distributed, then we need to know where we’re starting from,” said Shana Alex Lavarreda, director of health insurance studies at UCLA’s Center for Health Policy Research.

“This provides a good baseline for lawmakers to see who should we be reaching out to, where the outreach should go,” Lavarreda said. “Who are the uninsured in California?”

Highlights of the study based on 2007 and 2009 California Health Interview Survey data include:

Researchers divided the study into four county groups, ranging from least-hit (San Francisco, Marin, Alameda counties, for instance) to hardest-hit (Fresno, Kern, Merced counties, for example. The numbers were higher in the hard-hit counties, of course, but Lavarreda said another interesting statistic came out of that comparison.

“What we found is that among these county groups, which all had different levels of being hit, we found the same patterns — where the middle-aged were much more often uninsured,” Lavarreda said.

Policymakers likely should first target those high-impact areas first, she said, but they might also want to increase outreach efforts to that higher-uninsured middle-age population.

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