This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Galveston County Health District 4Cs Clinics Summary Needs Assessment for 5 Year Competitive Grant And 4Cs Healthcare Barriers.
Advertisements

 To provide Public goods and services:  National Defense  Police and fire protection  Courts and correctional institutions.  Public Parks  Streets,
IMPLEMENTING THE ACA: HOW MUCH WILL IT HELP VULNERABLE ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG ADULTS? Abigail English, JD Center for Adolescent Health & the Law
Measures of Child Well-Being from a Decentralized Statistical System: A View From the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics Stephen J. Blumberg, Ph.D.
MEDICAID REDESIGN – IDAHO What it would mean for Idahoans with disabilities. Presented by:
Medicaid Managed Care: Health Care Benefits and Barriers for People with Disabilities Gwyn C. Jones, Ph.D. National Association of State Health Plans Annual.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
* Hawai'i Coverage for All Project * DHHS / HRSA State Planning Grant * RCUH Prog. # * “Coverage is Confidence” The Uninsured Envision Health Insurance.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health.
SOCIAL SECURITY SOCIAL SECURITY In Belgium and Germany.
Office of Primary Care and Rural Health State Primary Care Grants Program  Title 26, Chapter 18, Part 3  Rule number: R  The goal of the State.
G1 © Family Economics & Financial Education – Revised April 2011 – Receiving Unit – Receiving Income from Government Programs – Slide 1 Funded by.
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Veterans Health Administration Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF) SSVF Grants: What They are (and Aren’t)
Compensation management “Attracting, retaining and motivating magic people”
Welcome Funds Available Low-Income Housing Funds Homeless Housing Funds 2009 Application Information.
Robin A. Cohen, PhD National Center for Health Statistics National Conference on Health Statistics August 7, 2012 Financial burden of medical care: Looking.
Healthy Communities, Healthy People. The Programs We Deliver Community Health Centers National Health Service Corps Workforce Training for Primary Care,
How can local initiatives help workless people find and keep paid work? Pamela Meadows Synergy Research and Consulting Ltd and National Institute of Economic.
NEW MEXICO STATE COVERAGE INITIATIVE New Mexico Human Services Department June, 2004 Carolyn Ingram, Director Medical Assistance Division.
Medicare: An Overview September 30, 2014 Society for Financial and Professional Development 7 th Annual Financial Literacy Leadership Conference Christina.
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) and Children with Special Health Care Needs Carol Tobias Boston University School of Public Health.
Coverage For All: Voices of the Uninsured PROJECT: Hawaii Coverage for All SPONSORING AGENCY: United States Department of Health and Human Services (US.
Tuesday, May 25, 2010 Collaborative Research …Humanizing research.
© Take Charge Today – August 2013 – Types of Insurance – Slide 1 Funded by a grant from Take Charge America, Inc. to the Norton School of Family and Consumer.
A Framework to Guide Full Service Partnerships for Adults Maria Funk, Ph.D. Mental Health Clinical District Chief ASOC Countywide Programs Los Angeles.
Melissa Stafford Jones HHS Regional Director, Region IX Health Insurance Literacy Summit September 25, 2015 Helping Consumers Understand Health Insurance:
© Family Economics & Financial Education – Updated May 2012 – Types of Insurance – Slide 1 Funded by a grant from Take Charge America, Inc. to the Norton.
3 August 2006 State Coverage Initiatives Workshop for State Officials 1 Session 3: Coverage Mandates Panelist: Jerry Russo Department of Economics University.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health.
Medicaid “Reform” and Mental Health Leighton Ku Senior Fellow Presentation at NAMI Conference, June 2005
1 Rapid Re-Housing: An Overview Welcome Home: Addressing Today's Challenges in Homeless Services June 2,
© Family Economics & Financial Education – Revised May 2011– Insurance Unit – Types of Insurance– Slide Funded by a grant from Take Charge America, Inc.
Legal UNIT B HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT 4.01 Summarize labor laws and regulations that affect employees and management.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health.
Employee Benefits. History Used to circumvent wage controls during WWII. A perk A right Back to individual responsibility.
REGIONAL CONFERENCE NORFOLK, VA MARCH 16, 2009 CONDUCTED BY THE CENTER FOR URBAN COMMUNITY SERVICES 1 South Hampton Roads Regional Housing Needs Assessment.
Affordable Care Act and Super-Utilizers Lynn Garcia, Kathleen Han, and Aileen Maertens SW 722 October 1, 2014.
Rev. 22 May 2003 This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State.
How Far Will the Safety Net Stretch? Providers to the Uninsured Third Technical Workshop – May 23, 2003 This research is funded in part through a U.S.
Health Reform: Local Safety Net Implications Karen J. Minyard, Ph.D., Executive Director, Georgia Health Policy Center, Georgia State University.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
Research Background and Design  History of churning of welfare rolls in NYC  Poverty rates increasing, unemployment increasing, food stamp uptake increasing-
President’s FY2017 Budget Request February 12, 2016.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
© Take Charge Today – August 2013 – Types of Insurance – Slide 1 Funded by a grant from Take Charge America, Inc. to the Norton School of Family and Consumer.
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health,
This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health.
© Take Charge Today – August 2013 – Types of Insurance – Slide 1 Funded by a grant from Take Charge America, Inc. to the Norton School of Family and Consumer.
City of Frederick Board of Aldermen Meeting October 27, 2010 FCAA/City of Frederick FQHC Planning Project.
Estimates of Hawai`i’s Uninsured from Hospital Emergency Department & Inpatient Data—the Latest Update The Hawaii Coverage for All Project Technical Workshop.
Uninsured Population Hawai`i: Adults Age 19-64
Uninsured Hawai`i Children Age 0-18
Uninsured Population: Hawai`i
Katerina Sherstyuk, Ph.D Gerard Russo, Ph.D.
Estimates of the Uninsured Population: HHS 2000, 2001
Presentation transcript:

This research is funded in part through a U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, State Planning Grant to the Hawaii State Department of Health, Prime Contract No. 1 P09 OA Sub-Contract Research Corporation of the University of Hawaii, Project No Research conducted by the University of Hawaii, Social Science Research Institute in collaboration with the Hawaii State Department of Health, Hawaii Institute for Public Affairs/Hawaii Uninsured Project and the Hawaii Health Information Corporation. Summarizing Qualitative Research with the Uninsured in Hawai'i Heather Young Leslie D. William Wood Carol Murry J.D. Baker With: Jill McGrath Jones, Jin Young Choi & Evern Williams University of Hawai`i at Mānoa Hawai`i Coverage for All Project IV Technical Workshop 26 September 2003 Who’s Out There?

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. Methodology Data Collection: Multiple Researchers, pre-arranged interviews Locally based intermediaries set up interviews Long, semi-structured in-situ “field” interviews, 5 islands: Hawai‘i, Kaua‘i, Maui, Moloka‘i and O’ahu. Digital Audio recorded interviews, Detailed field notes Post interview: summaries, impressions and concerns

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. Methodology Data Management & Analysis Prioritization system for selective transcription Coding of summaries & transcripts using ATLAS/ti Hermeneutic model building, based on Grounded Theory Identification of key Issues, conceptual Themes and possible recommendations for ensuring “Coverage for All”

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. Where did we interview?

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. Who did we talk to? 190 people 96 Men, 94 Women Multi-ethnic Age Range from 18 – had ‘some’ military connection 5 Islands, 39 locations 5,098 minutes interview time, median length 35 mins 42 non-recorded interviews Total estimated interview time: 6,554 minutes

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. What are their lives like? Accommodation Homeless : 9% (17) Temporary Abode: 13% (25) Squatters: 3% (6) Rent or Own Home: 75% (141) Family 35% (67) people were responsible for 149 dependents. 65% (123) had no dependents

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. What are their lives like? Occupation (n=190) Working at all: 53% (100) Self-employed: 22% (41) Multiple Jobs: 13% (24) Under-employed: 26.5% (26) Retired & working: 2.6% (5) Retired & not working: 7.9% (15) Student: 4% (8)

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. What are their lives like? Morbidity Substance Abuse: 17.4% (33) Disability or Chronic Condition: 35% (67) Of 190 people, 100 suffered some condition that made it difficult to work, and that meant their social needs overlapped with their medical system needs

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. Results 185+ codes (so far) in the interview data. At the end of the data collection & analysis process, key issues & themes previously reported are confirmed. The following are some of the more compelling & resonant themes & issues

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. Results: Key Themes Stoicism & Self-Recrimination Gambling on Health & Ostriching, Paid for Naught Quest = Burden & Bureaucracy = Confusion Can’t Pay, Can’t Comply Coverage Means Confidence Self-Medication & Auto-Dentistry Inalienable Right & State Responsibility

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. Results: Key issues Affordability Alienation Accessibility Equity Preconditions & Pay-downs Social Safety Net State Responsibility

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. Results Ideals of Health Insurance Coverage: Emergency & catastrophic coverage, with no lifetime cut-offs or preconditions Public health, mental health & preventative medicine (rural areas especially) Dental (Not just extractions) Drugs (including prophylactic & harm- reduction,) Culturally competent & flexible

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. Some Next Targets Information about coverage & eligibility to be more accessible & flexible, less bureaucratic, with multi-lingual, ongoing & creative outreach Disability ‘spend downs’ & precondition problems Dental, mental & rural area access Premium costs closer to other household utilities, sliding scale premiums, rewards & grace periods for low-users who become unemployed Coverage for under-employed, exempted categories and multiple-job workers

26 September 2003 Preliminary results. Please do not quote. After all the talk… The greatest costs of living in Hawai’i are housing, education, transport and health benefits. In the normal day-to-day life, health insurance is less immediately a need. Thus while needed and desired, pragmatic consumers prioritize health premiums last in tight economic conditions. Cost of premiums and lack of clear information were clearly major deterrents for the 190 people we spoke with. Any unmitigated premium increases will likely result in more uninsured in Hawai’i