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(as of Mar 25, 2021 01:58:19 UTC – Details)
About 80 percent of college students aged 18 through 23 had health insurance in 2006. While 67 percent of college students were covered through employer-sponsored plans, 7 percent were covered through other private health insurance plans, such as student insurance plans, and 6 percent were covered by public programs, such as Medicaid. Most insured students were covered, for example, as a dependent, on a policy under another person’s name. About 20 percent of college students aged 18 through 23 (1.7 million) were uninsured in 2006, and certain groups of students–such as part-time students, nonwhite students, and students from families with lower incomes–were more likely than others to be uninsured. The characteristics of uninsured students are consistent with those of the uninsured found in the general U.S. population. Over half of colleges nationwide offered student insurance plans in the 2007-2008 academic year, and plans’ benefits varied. Colleges customized their plans to reflect their priorities in making premiums affordable for students while providing coverage that meets students’ needs. The plans GAO reviewed varied in the services they covered and how they paid for covered services. Specifically, some plans excluded preventive services from coverage and some plans limited payment for benefits such as prescription drugs. In addition, plans also varied in terms of premiums and maximum benefits, with annual premiums ranging from $30 to $2,400 and maximum benefits ranging from $2,500 for each illness or injury to unlimited lifetime coverage. Colleges and states have taken a variety of steps to increase the number of insured college students. For example, GAO estimated that about 30 percent of colleges nationwide required students to have health insurance in academic year 2007-2008, and some states also have health insurance requirements for college students. Finally, some states have expanded dependents’ eligibility for private health insurance, which makes insurance more available to college students who obtain coverage as dependents. Officials from the American College Health Association (ACHA)–an advocacy and leadership organization for college and university health–provided a technical comment, which we incorporated.