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United States

Children without health insurance by race and ethnicity in United States
Children without health insurance by race and ethnicity
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Definition and Source
PROVIDER
Definition
Children under age 19 not covered by any health insurance by race and ethnicity.
The data are based on health insurance coverage at the time of the survey; interviews are conducted throughout the calendar year. Children receiving health insurance through a variety of State Health Insurance Programs (SCHIP) are counted as having health insurance.
The data are based on health insurance coverage at the time of the survey; interviews are conducted throughout the calendar year. Children receiving health insurance through a variety of State Health Insurance Programs (SCHIP) are counted as having health insurance.
Data Source
Population Reference Bureau, analysis of data from the U.S. Census Bureau, 2017-2019, 2021 American Community Survey. These data are derived from data available in ACS table C27001 (B,C,D,E,G,H,I).
Notes
Updated September 2022.
S - Estimates suppressed when the confidence interval around the percentage is greater than or equal to 10 percentage points.
N.A. – Data not available.
Note: Differences in estimates by race and ethnicity between 2021 ACS and prior years may be the result of demographic changes, and/or differences in question wording (the ACS question on race was revised in 2020 to make it consistent with the 2020 Census race question), processing, coding updates, or methodological differences in the population estimates used as controls. For more information, see the ACS Race User Note: Improvements to the Race Question.
A 90 percent confidence interval for each estimate can be found at
Children without health insurance by race and ethnicity.
S - Estimates suppressed when the confidence interval around the percentage is greater than or equal to 10 percentage points.
N.A. – Data not available.
Note: Differences in estimates by race and ethnicity between 2021 ACS and prior years may be the result of demographic changes, and/or differences in question wording (the ACS question on race was revised in 2020 to make it consistent with the 2020 Census race question), processing, coding updates, or methodological differences in the population estimates used as controls. For more information, see the ACS Race User Note: Improvements to the Race Question.
A 90 percent confidence interval for each estimate can be found at
Children without health insurance by race and ethnicity.
Last Updated
September 2022