Half of high school graduates who do not go to college are uninsured for some time during the year after graduation--two times the rate of high school graduates who go to college. This is because young adults who enter the labor market do not have access to university health plans, and few are likely to be eligible for their parents' coverage or to have a job with benefits. Those previously insured under Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program have even fewer options: both programs reclassify 19-year-olds as adults, which means nearly all teenagers become ineligible for public coverage on their 19th birthdays whether they go to college or not.
Lack of Coverage Disrupts Access to Health Care and Creates Financial Stress
Although young adults are on average healthier than older adults, they too need access to both preventive and acute health care. Contrary to conventional wisdom, they are well aware of the risks of going without insurance--when young working people are offered health insurance they take it up at nearly the same rate as older workers. And they suffer when they don't have coverage. Half of 19- to 29-year-olds without insurance coverage go without needed care because of cost and half have problems with medical bills, including being contacted by a collection agency.
Policy Options Could Improve Coverage for Young People
Apart from system-wide changes that would expand access to insurance coverage for all Americans, the authors point to targeted policy changes that could improve coverage for young adults: