Volume 49 | Number 6 | December 2014

Abstract List

Arturo Vargas Bustamante Ph.D., M.P.P., Jie Chen Ph.D.


Objective

We study the association between the timing of the Great Recession () and health spending among uninsured adults distinguishing by citizenship/nativity status and time of U.S. residence.


Data Source

Uninsured U.S. citizens and noncitizens from the 2005–2006 and 2008–2009 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey.


Study Design

The probability of reporting any health spending and the natural logarithm of health spending are our main dependent variables. We compare health spending across population categories before/during the . Subsequently, we implement two‐part regression analyses of total and specific health‐spending measures. We predict average health spending before/during the with a smearing estimation.


Principal Findings

The probability of reporting any spending diminished for recent immigrants compared to citizens during the . For those with any spending, recent immigrants reported higher spending during the (27 percent). Average reductions in total spending were driven by the decline in the share of the population reporting any spending among citizens and noncitizens.


Conclusions

Our study findings suggest that recent immigrants could be forgoing essential care, which later translates into higher spending. It portrays the vulnerability of a population that would remain exposed to income shocks, even after the Affordable Care Act () implementation.