CPR Working Paper Series No. 20
Does Chronic Illness Affect
the
Adequacy of Health Insurance Coverage?
Kevin T. Stroupe, Eleanor D. Kinney, and Thomas J. Kniesner
March 2000
Abstract: Although chronically ill individuals need
protection against high medical expenses, they
often have difficulty obtaining adequate
insurance coverage due to medical underwriting
practices used to classify and price risks and
to define and limit coverage for individuals
and groups. Using data from healthy and
chronically ill individuals in Indiana, we
found that illness decreased the probability
of having adequate insurance, particularly
among single individuals. Chronic illness
decreased the probability of having adequate
coverage by about 10 percentage points among
all individuals and by about 25 percentage
points among single individuals. Preexisting
condition exclusions were a major source of
inadequate insurance. Our results emphasize
the impact of enforcing the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of
1997, which limits preexisting condition
exclusions.
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