Substantial uncertainty exists regarding the causal effect of health insurance on the utilization of care.
Most studies cannot determine whether the large differences in healthcare utilization between the insured
and the uninsured are due to insurance status or to other unobserved differences between the two groups.
In this paper, we exploit a sharp change in insurance coverage rates that results from young adults
“aging out” of their parents’ insurance plans to estimate the effect of insurance coverage on the utilization
of emergency department (ED) and inpatient services. Using the National Health Interview Survey
(NHIS) and a census of emergency department records and hospital discharge records from seven
states, we find that aging out results in an abrupt 5 to 8 percentage point reduction in the probability
of having health insurance. We find that not having insurance leads to a 40 percent reduction in ED
visits and a 61 percent reduction in inpatient hospital admissions. The drop in ED visits and inpatient
admissions is due entirely to reductions in the care provided by privately owned hospitals, with particularly
large reductions at for profit hospitals. The results imply that expanding health insurance coverage
would result in a substantial increase in care provided to currently uninsured individua