Massachusetts Health Reform Sustained Improvements, Including Self-Reported Health Status

Massachusetts healthcare reform continues to show sustained improvements in several areas, including access to healthcare and improved self-reported health statuses, according to research published in Health Affairs.

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Researchers found the following trends since the implementation of the law in 2006:

•    Rates of uninsured individuals remain low.
•    Employer-sponsored healthcare insurance is still strong.
•    Healthcare access also remained strong.
•    The incidence of emergency department visits and hospital inpatient stays declined, suggesting “improvements in the effectiveness of healthcare delivery in the state,” authors wrote.
•    Self-reported health statuses among residents improved.
•    Two-thirds of Massachusetts adults continue to support the reform law.

Despite these improvements, the researchers also found affordability of health services continues to be a challenge for many individuals. In addition, the proportion of nonsupporters of the law in 2006 (17 percent) increased in 2010 (26.9 percent).

Related Articles on Reform:

36 Reasons Why Health Reform’s Repeal Would Still Impact Massachusetts’ Residents

Supreme Court Rejects Call to Exclude Justice Kagan From Healthcare Reform Appeals

The Future of Healthcare: 9 Capabilities for Post-Reform Success

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