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  Highlights of New Census Data on Uninsured Women of Childbearing Age and Children

Uninsured Women of Childbearing Age (15-44) & Children, by State (1999-2001 Average)
Women Ages 15-44
Children Under Age 19
State
Number (1000s)
Percent
Rank
Number (1000s)
Percent
Rank
Alabama
183
18.4
34
116
9.7
21
Alaska
28
19.4
36
30
14.5
41
Arizona
261
23.2
46
281
18.2
49
Arkansas
112
21.2
42
89
12.2
37
California
1,813
23.4
47
1656
16.3
44
Colorado
173
17.8
33
177
14.5
40
Connecticut
93
12.7
13
70
7.9
14
Delaware
18
10.9
6
16
7.5
11
District of Columbia
18
13.7
19
13
11.3
32
Florida
748
22.9
45
678
17.2
46
Georgia
329
17.3
30
297
12.8
38
Hawaii
29
11.3
10
31
9.2
18
Idaho
56
20.3
38
60
15.5
42
Illinois
481
17.3
29
374
11.1
31
Indiana
184
14.6
22
159
10.2
23
Iowa
64
10.6
5
47
6.2
5
Kansas
83
14.9
23
73
10.5
26
Kentucky
146
16.8
28
106
10.3
24
Louisiana
253
25.5
49
220
17.3
47
Maine
35
13.6
17
21
7
9
Maryland
158
14.4
21
137
7.0
22
Massachusetts
159
11.2
8
106
9.7
8
Michigan
282
12.9
15
209
6.9
13
Minnesota
98
9.0
2
78
7.6
4
Mississippi
133
20.3
39
95
5.9
34
Missouri
138
11.4
11
80
11.6
3
Montana
37
19.9
37
38
5.3
43
Nebraska
37
9.8
3
38
15.6
15
Nevada
91
21.1
41
106
8.0
47
New Hampshire
31
11.4
12
27
17.3
6
New Jersey
321
17.4
31
197
6.5
20
New Mexico
117
31.6
51
114
20.8
50
New York
856
20.4
40
529
10.7
28
North Carolina
336
19.2
35
242
11.5
33
North Dakota
17
12.7
14
14
9.5
19
Ohio
351
14.3
20
264
9.0
17
Oklahoma
166
23.6
48
151
16.8
45
Oregon
119
16.0
26
108
11.8
35
Pennsylvania
279
11.1
7
209
7.0
10
Rhode Island
18
8.2
1
12
4.7
1
South Carolina
134
16.3
27
125
12.0
36
South Dakota
21
13.7
18
17
8.7
16
Tennessee
170
13.6
16
110
7.5
12
Texas
1,297
28.1
50
1423
22.7
51
Utah
82
15.9
25
79
10.4
25
Vermont
15
11.3
9
7
4.9
2
Virginia
235
15.2
24
198
10.6
27
Washington
232
17.7
32
171
10.9
30
West Virginia
76
21.5
43
44
10.8
29
Wisconsin
117
10.3
4
98
6.7
7
Wyoming
23
21.8
44
17
13.2
39
United States (3-yr avg)
11,253
18.3
--
9,553
12.5
--


Data prepared for the March of Dimes by the Bureau of the Census using Current Population Surveys from March 2000, March 2001, and March 2002, except rankings computed by the March of Dimes. Notes: State data are compiled using three-year averages because small sample sizes make single-year state data less reliable. Rankings are based on two decimal places; differences among states may not be significant. Survey changes prohibit comparison to data from earlier years.


Census Data on the Uninsured in 2001 - Key Points


Women of Childbearing Age (15-44)

  • The number of uninsured women of childbearing age continued to rise in 2001, increasing by 260,000 to 11.5 million.
  • In 2001, nearly one in five women of childbearing age (18.7%) went without health insurance—a higher rate than other Americans under the age of 65 (15.8%).
  • Some 28 % of the 41 million uninsured Americans are women of childbearing age.
  • Hispanic women in this age group are almost three times as likely as whites to be uninsured -- 38 percent compared with 13 percent. Native American (30 %, African-American (23 %) and Asian women (20 %) were also likelier than whites to be uninsured.


Uninsured Children Under 19

  • In 2001, 9.2 million (12 %) of the nation’s 77 million children under 19 were uninsured.
  • After several years of improvement, the proportion of children under age 19 without health insurance remained flat in 2001.
  • Hispanic children were more than three times as likely as whites to be uninsured - 25 percent compared with less than 8 percent. Native American (22 %), African-American (14 %) and Asian children (12 percent) were also more likely than whites to be uninsured.
  • The number and proportion of children under 19 covered by Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program grew in 2001. Some 1.5 million more children were covered through these programs than in 2000, an increase from 20 to 22 percent of all children.


State Variation

  • Uninsured rates vary widely by state.* For example for the three year period 1999-2001, Texas (23%) and New Mexico (21%) have the highest rates of uninsured children under 19, while Vermont and Rhode Island have the lowest rates, less than 5%. The US average for these years is 12.5%. In 22 states, less than 10 percent of children were uninsured.
  • New Mexico (32%) and Texas (28%) also had the highest rates of uninsured women of childbearing age for the 1999-2001 period. Rhode Island (8%) and Minnesota (9%) had the lowest rates. The US average was 18%.

*  Census uses a three-year average, currently for 1999-2001, when looking at uninsured rates within states because small sample sizes make a single year's data less reliable.

 
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