Volume 42 | Number 2 | April 2007

Abstract List

Jennifer Kincheloe, Janice Frates, E. Richard Brown


Objective

To develop a comprehensive predictive model of eligible children's enrollment in California's Medicaid (Medi‐Cal [MC]) and State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP; Healthy Families [HF]) programs.


Data Sources/Study Setting

2001 California Health Interview Survey data, data on outstationed eligibility workers (OEWs), and administrative data from state agencies and local health insurance expansion programs for fiscal year 2000–2001.


Study Design

The study examined the effects of multiple family‐level factors and contextual county‐level factors on children's enrollment in Medicaid and SCHIP.


Data Collection/Extraction Methods

Simple logistical regression analyses were conducted with sampling weights. Hierarchical logistic regressions were run to control for clustering.


Principal Findings

Participation in MC and HF programs is determined by a combination of family‐level , and factors, and county‐level factors. The strongest predictors of MC enrollment were family‐level immigration status, ethnicity, and income, and the presence of a county‐level “expansion program”; and the county‐level ratio of OEWs to eligible children. Important HF enrollment predictors included family‐level ethnicity, age, number of hours a parent worked, and urban residence; and county‐level population size and outreach and media expenditure.


Conclusions

MC and HF outreach/enrollment efforts should target poorer and immigrant families (especially Latinos), older children, and children living in larger and urban counties. To reach uninsured eligible children, it is important to further simplify the application process and fund selected outreach efforts. Local health insurance expansion programs increase children's enrollment in MC.