Friday, December 6, 2019

Latino and Black Children are not Insured

Question: Why more Latino and Black children arent insured. Answer: The randomized study on the Washington post article posted by Erin Blakemore was about the reasons why many Latino and black children are not insured since platforms like Medicaid and the Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP) were established to ensure the poor Americans access quality and equitable health care (Pei, 2014). The study population involved 267 children whose parents were interviewed. It was carried out from 2011 to 2014 in Dallas over a span of three years (Blakemore, 2016). Data was collected through structured interviews and direct interrogation about the parents knowledge on whether their children were eligible for the insurance. Out of the total studied Latino and black parents, forty-nine percent did not know that their children are qualified for CHIP or Medicaid. Collectively, ninety-five percent of the children were previously insured before the onset of the Medicaid and CHIP. These parents had incomes that were higher, and the African American parents were likely to be more aware than their Latino counterparts at a percentage ratio of 57 to 47. The parents had their reasons for the less involvement in the health insurance platforms. For instance, 30% of the parents had lost the cover and never reapplied. 9% did not receive replies after application, 8 % missed some important paperwork, and 4% said the fathers were to cover (Blakemore, 2016). The study concluded that more than 50% of the African American and Latino parents in Dallas do not utilize the subsidized insurance systems and those who do give up on the way. The randomized design benefited the study by ensuring easy and straightforward analysis of the findings, flexibility by accommodating the small population, and the elimination of bias in scenarios where only accessible parents could be interviewed. Furthermore, the study population was identified in an open manner eliminating doubts among the readers and observer groups. Because of the randomized study, it was readily known that high-income parents did not use these insurance provisions. Moreover, it could be hard for other study designs to specifically note that the African American and Latino parents out of the entire American population were underusing CHIP and Medicaid (Blakemore, 2016). References Blakemore, E. (2016).Study finds a surprising reason why more black, Latino children arent insured.Washington Post. Retrieved 21 September 2016, from https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/to-your-health/wp/2016/04/04/study-finds-surprising-reason-why-more-black-latino-children-arent-insured/ Pei, Z. (2014). How Long before Rectifying Medicaid and CHIP Children? Employment Research, 21(4), 5-7. https://research.upjohn.org/empl_research/vol21/iss4/2/

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