New Survey Documents Women’s Health Care, Coverage and Early Experiences with the Affordable Care Act

A comprehensive survey released today by the Kaiser Family Foundation provides a snapshot of women and their health coverage and care during a time of transition as important Affordable Care Act insurance market changes began to take root.   These include many changes that affect women including a prohibition on using gender in setting premiums, as well as broadening access to a more comprehensive range of preventive services benefits without cost sharing.

The Kaiser Women’s Health Survey, conducted from Sept. 19 to Nov. 21, 2013, provides a national overview of women’s health experiences regarding health care coverage, access, and affordability among nonelderly women (ages 18 to 64) in the United States more than a year after the ACA requirements for preventive and contraceptive coverage affecting women took effect and shortly before the coverage expansions in the law took full effect in January 2014.

Key findings include:

The survey also provides a deeper look at reproductive health and other issues affecting women of childbearing age, defined in the survey as those ages 15 to 44. Key findings for this age group include:

The survey is the latest in a periodic series begun in 2001. The complete 2013 survey report, including a discussion of methodology, can be viewed online. The findings were to be discussed this morning at a public briefing in the Barbara Jordan Conference Center in the Foundation’s Washington D.C. office. Materials from the briefing, including an archived webcast, will be available online later today.

Methodology

The 2013 Kaiser Women’s Health Survey was conducted from September 19 to November 21 among a nationally representative random digit dial telephone sample of 3,015 women ages 15 to 64 living in the U.S. Telephone interviews conducted by landline and cell phone were carried out in English and Spanish. A shorter companion survey with a nationally representative sample of 700 men ages 18 to 64 was conducted using similar RDD landline and cell phone methodology.  The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage points for the full sample of women and plus or minus 4 percentage points for men. For results based on subgroups, the margin of sampling error is higher.

# # #

Contact

Chris Lee
202-347-5270
CLee@kff.org
Exit mobile version