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New Report Finds Regional, State Differences in Health Insurance Coverage For Immediate Release: June 25, 2008 Contact: CDC
National Center for Health Statistics Office of
Communication (301) 458-4800 State, Regional, and
National Estimates of Health Insurance Coverage for People Under 65 Years of
Age: National Health Interview Survey, 2004-2006.
NHSR Number 1. 24 pp.
New England had the lowest percentage of uninsured individuals under age 65 in 2004-2006 and the Southwest had the highest, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Health Statistics. Overall, 91.1 percent of New Englanders had some kind of health insurance in 2004-2006. The Southwest had the greatest proportion of uninsured -- 18.2 percent of children and nearly 30 percent of adults. The report is based on data collected from 240,000 people under age 65 as part of the 2004-2006 National Health Interview Survey. Findings include:
Data were available for 41 states. Nine states and the District of Columbia had sample sizes that were too small for a meaningful analysis and were excluded from the state-specific analysis. The report, "State, Regional, and National Estimates of Health Insurance Coverage for People Under 65 Years of Age: National Health Interview Survey, 2004-2006," is available at www.cdc.gov/nchs. Preliminary national data for 2007 were also released today in a separate report, showing 43.1 million Americans of all ages were uninsured in 2007 (14.5 percent of the population.) This report also shows that 8.9 percent of children under age 18 had no health insurance in 2007 -- the lowest percentage of uninsured children in the past decade.
This page last reviewed September 04, 2008
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