Narrowing Insurance Disparities Among Children and Adolescents With Cancer Following the Affordable Care Act

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Abstract

Despite advances toward universal health insurance coverage for children, coverage gaps remain. Using a nationwide sample of pediatric and adolescent cancer patients from the National Cancer Database, we examined effects of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) implementation in 2014 with multinomial logistic regressions to evaluate insurance changes between 2010-2013 (pre-ACA) and 2014-2017 (post-ACA) in patients aged younger than 18 years (n = 63 377). All statistical tests were 2-sided. Following the ACA, the overall percentage of Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program-covered patients increased (from 35.1% to 36.9%; adjusted absolute percentage change [APC] = 2.01 percentage points [ppt], 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.31 to 2.71; P

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Ji, X., Hu, X., Castellino, S. M., Mertens, A. C., Yabroff, K. R., & Han, X. (2022). Narrowing Insurance Disparities Among Children and Adolescents With Cancer Following the Affordable Care Act. JNCI Cancer Spectrum, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/jncics/pkac006

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