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TRENDS
Eroding Access Among Nonelderly U.S. Adults With Chronic Conditions: Ten Years Of Change
Catherine Hoffman and
Karyn Schwartz
Both the connection to health care and its affordability worsened for many nonelderly U.S. adults living with chronic conditions between 1997 and 2006. This erosion varied by health insurance coverage, fundamental as it is to securing health services. Access to care among uninsured adults with chronic conditions deteriorated on all of our basic measures between 1997 and 2006. In addition, more of both the privately and publicly insured with chronic conditions went without health care because of its cost over this ten-year span, even while they were just as likely as or more likely than others to have a usual source of care over time.

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S. D. Pizer, A. B. Frakt, and L. I. Iezzoni
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Comments:
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- Chronic Diseases Exclude Mental Health
- Samuel L. Kent, MD
- Health Affairs, 14 Aug 2008
[Full text]
- Looking For A Source Of Data That Includes Chronic Mental Conditions
- Catherine B. Hoffman, et al.
- Health Affairs, 28 Aug 2008
[Full text]
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