Volume 30, Number 1 (Winter) 1995

Currie, Janet, and Duncan Thomas. 1995. "Medical Care for Children: Public Insurance, Private Insurance and Racial Differences in Utilization." Journal of Human Resources 30(1):135-162.

Data from two waves of the Child-Mother module of the National Longitudinal Surveys are used to examine the medical care received by children. We compare those covered by Medicaid, by private health insurance and those with no insurance coverage at all. We find there are substantial differences in the impact of public and private health insurance and these effects also differ between blacks and whites. White children on Medicaid tend to have more doctor checkups than any other children and white children on Medicaid or a private insurance plan have a higher number of doctor visits for illness. In contrast, for black children, neither Medicaid nor private insurance coverage is associated with any advantage in terms of the number of doctor visits for illness. Furthermore, black children with private coverage are no more likely than those with no coverage to have doctor checkups; black Medicaid children are more likely than either group to have checkups although the gap is not precisely estimated. We exploit the longitudinal dimension of the data in order to take account of potential selection and thus include child specific fixed effects in the models. The results are robust to the inclusion of these controls for unobserved heterogeneity. They suggest that private and public health insurance mean different things to different children, and that national insurance coverage will not equalize utilization of care.

Janet Currie is a professor of economics at the University of California, Los Angeles and a researcher at NBER. Duncan Thomas is a researcher at the RAND Corporation and a professor of economics at the University of California, Los Angeles. The authors thank David Cutler, Mike Grossman, Jon Gruber, Joseph Newhouse, Jim Poterba, Jim Smith, Jon Skinner, and two anonymous referees for helpful comments; Nancy Cole provided excellent research assistance. Janet Currie gratefully acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation (SES-9122640) and from the NBER Olin fellowship. The data used in this paper is available from the authors upon request.


© 2002 by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System

US ISSN 0022-166X

Return to JHR Home Page