The share of Americans without health insurance fell in 27 states last year as unemployment remained remarkably low and the number of people on Medicare grew as the Baby Boom generation continued to retire.
Massachusetts led all states with only 2.4% of its residents uninsured. The U.S. Census Bureau said the highest uninsured rate was in Texas where 16.6% of people lacked health insurance, but even that was an improvement over the state's 18% rate two years ago.
More people were insured through work last year and public insurance coverage expanded as the nation’s population continues to age. But the story differed from state to state.
'For seven of the states with lower uninsured rates in 2022. the difference was driven by increased private coverage. For 10 states, the uninsured rate decrease was related to increased public coverage,'’ said David Waddington, chief of the Social, Economic, and Housing Statistics Division at the Census Bureau. In three particular states — Missouri, New York, and Virginia — the decline in the uninsured rate was a result of increases in public coverage that outweighed decreases in private coverage.
Police Uncover Multi-Million Rand 'Death Industry'
Take the bigger check
Advisor News
- Worker retirement confidence dips to lowest level in a decade
- What’s behind private equity investment in insurance brokerages
- Advisors get a win as NJ Senate passes independent contractor bill
- Why federal retirement benefits are more complex than advisors realize
- Why timing the market is still a retirement mistake and what to do instead
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- Best’s Special Report: U.S. Life/Annuity Industry Sees Bottom-Line Growth Despite 18% Decline in Total Income in First-Quarter 2026
- Globe Life Inc. (NYSE: GL) Records 52-Week High Thursday Morning
- Fortitude Re Completes $500 Million FABN Issuance
- Reframing retirement income for greater certainty
- Jackson Introduces Dow Jones Industrial Average Index Option, Flexible Premiums, Six-Year Rate Guarantee in Latest Registered Index-Linked Annuity Launch
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Findings from Brown University Provides New Data on Managed Care (Low-Value Care Following Hospital and Private Equity Acquisition in Primary Care): Managed Care
- Reports from University of Chicago Medicine Advance Knowledge in HIV/AIDS (A Community Located Insurance Navigation Intervention to Link Sexual and Gender Minorities in Status Neutral Care: Results From the Navigating Insurance Coverage …): Immune System Diseases and Conditions – HIV/AIDS
- New Insurance Findings from Johns Hopkins University Outlined (Medicare coverage choice is not neutral: how policy design shapes beneficiary enrollment): Insurance
- Collinsville man, St. Louis woman charged in Illinois health fraud case
- Governor vetoes changes to health-care risk pool oversight
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Researchers from Georgia Institute of Technology Report on Findings in Insurance (Black Life Insurance Companies, Mortgages, and African American Homeownership Before 1964): Insurance
- How much money do Connecticut residents need to retire comfortably?
- Earl Dudley Jr. to Become Chief Human Resources Officer at Mutual of Omaha
- How accelerated underwriting is transforming life insurance
- OVER $107 MILLION IN LIFE INSURANCE BENEFITS LOCATED FOR TENNESSEANS IN 2025 THROUGH NAIC'S LIFE INSURANCE POLICY LOCATOR SERVICE
More Life Insurance News