This report summarizes the proceedings of a workshop convened in June 2010 to critically examine the various databases that could provide national and state-level estimates of low-income uninsured children and could be effectively used as criteria for monitoring children's health insurance coverage.
- FrontMatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Part I: Workshop Summary
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Changing Policy Context
- 3 Federal Surveys
- 4 Administrative Databases
- 5 State Data Collections
- 6 Modeling Strategies for Improving Estimates
- 7 Looking Ahead
- References
- Part II: Background Papers
- 8 Monitoring Children’s Health Insurance Coverage Under CHIPRA Using Federal Surveys--Genevieve Kenney and Victoria Lynch
- 9 Health Insurance Coverage in the American Community Survey: A Comparison to Two Other Federal Surveys--Joanna Turner and Michel Boudreaux
- 10 Income and Poverty Measurement in Surveys of Health Insurance Coverage--John L. Czajka
- 11 Using Uninsured Data to Track State CHIP Programs--John McInerney
- 12 The Massachusetts Experience: Using Survey Data to Evaluate State Health Care Reform--Sharon K. Long
- 13 Small-Domain Estimation of Health Insurance Coverage--Brett O’Hara and Mark Bauder
- Appendix A: Workshop Agenda and Participants
- Appendix B: Biographical Sketches of Steering Committee Members
- Committee on National Statistics