LOGIN MPPI NOT A MEMBER? REGISTER

FOR PRESS MPPI CONTACT US MPPI SUPPORT

Mandating Health Insurance: Would The Massachusetts Plan Work For Maryland?

Health Care

by Marc Kilmer

MARYLAND POLICY REPORT

JANUARY 16, 2007 pdf PDF VERSION MailE-MAIL THIS PrintPRINTER FRIENDLY Bookmark and Share

Recent surveys indicate roughly 16 percent of Maryland’s population has no health insurance. Only 22 states have a greater percentage of their population who lack insurance.[1] This has led to the call for new public policies to extend insurance coverage to the uninsured.  

Some elected officials have looked to Massachusetts as a model for how Maryland should deal with this issue. In 2006, Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney pushed through a plan mandating that all residents of Massachusetts have health insurance. The idea animating this bill is to require everyone to have health insurance, and then to use the funds otherwise going to pay the bills of the uninsured to provide these individuals with financial assistance and access to insurance. The plan proposes to accomplish this through the following means:



[1]Council for Affordable Health Insurance, “ State Health Insurance Index 2006: A 50-State Comparison of the Nation’s Health Insurance Market,” October 26, 2006. The data referenced here was found in the methodology paper that accompanied this report.  

To read the full report, click here pdf