An Estimated 6.6 Million Young Adults Stayed on or Joined Their Parents' 
Health Plans in 2011 Who Would Not Have Been Eligible Prior to Passage of the 
Affordable Care Act
When Fully Implemented, the ACA Will Cover Nearly All Remaining Uninsured 
Young Adults and Provide Protection Against Medical Debt
        Contact(s):
Mary Mahon 
Public Information Officer
TEL 
212-606-3853, cell phone 917-225-2314, mm@cmwf.org
Jemma Weymouth:
TEL 301-280-5706, jweymouth@burnesscommunications.com
June 8, 2012, New York, NY—In 2011, 13.7 million young 
adults ages 19 to 25 stayed on or joined their parentsf health plans, including 
6.6 million who would likely not have been able to do so before passage of the 
Affordable Care Act, according to a new Commonwealth Fund report. 
However, not all young adults have parents with health plans they can join, and 
many still experience gaps in coverage and face medical bill problems and 
medical debt. Nearly two of five (39%) young adults ages 19 to 29 went without 
health insurance at some time in 2011, and more than one-third (36%) had medical 
bill problems or were paying off medical debt. Of those who reported problems 
with medical bills or debt, many faced serious financial consequences such as 
using all of their savings (43%), being unable to make student loan or tuition 
payments (32%), delaying education or career plans (31%), or being unable to pay 
for necessities such as food, heat, or rent (28%). 
The report, Young, 
Uninsured and in Debt: Why Young Adults Lack Health Insurance and How the 
Affordable Care Act Is Helping, finds that 13.7 million young adults stayed 
on or joined their parentfs health plans from November 2010 to November 2011, 
with about half of those likely gaining coverage because of the provision in the 
Affordable Care Act requiring that health plans that include dependent coverage 
insure children until age 26. 
Young adults in low-income households were 
most at risk for remaining uninsured. Seventy percent of young adults with 
incomes under 133 percent of poverty ($14,484 for a single person) had a gap in 
coverage in 2011, more than three times the rate of those with incomes over 400 
percent of poverty ($43,560 for a single person). Only 17 percent of young 
adults ages 19–25 in low-income families stayed on or joined their parentsf 
plans, compared with 69 percent of young adults in the highest income 
households. Young adults over 25 cannot take advantage of the early provision. 
gWhile the Affordable Care Act has already provided a new source of 
coverage for millions of young adults at risk of being uninsured, more help is 
needed for those left behind,h says Commonwealth Fund Vice President Sara 
Collins, lead author of the report. gThe lawfs major insurance provisions slated 
for 2014, including expanded Medicaid and subsidized private plans through state 
insurance exchanges, will provide nearly all young adults across the income 
spectrum with affordable and comprehensive health plans.h 
Many 
Young Adults Accumulate Medical Debt; Delay Getting Needed Care 
The 
report finds that more than one-third of all young adults ages 19–29 are coping 
with medical bill burdens just at the beginning of their working lives. Of those 
young adults with medical bill problems or who were paying off medical debt, 70 
percent reported financial consequences such as using up all their savings, 
having to ask family members for help, taking on credit card debt, being unable 
to meet other debt obligations, or delaying education or career plans. Those who 
were uninsured or had a gap in coverage were at greatest risk: half (51%) of 
young adults who were uninsured when surveyed and nearly half (44%) with a gap 
in coverage during the year had a medical bill problem or medical debt. 
The amount of medical debt was often substantial. One-quarter of young adults 
who were paying off medical debt owed $4,000 or more, and 15 percent reported 
$8,000 or more in debt. Among those with a gap in coverage during the year who 
were paying off debt, 31 percent had $4,000 or more of medical debt, 21 percent 
had $8,000 or more, and 11 percent had $10,000 or more. 
Regardless of 
whether they had insurance, many young adults skipped or delayed getting needed 
health care because of cost. Two of five (41%) young adults said they did not 
fill a prescription; skipped a medical test, treatment, or follow-up visit 
recommended by a doctor; did not go to a doctor when sick; or did not get needed 
specialist care because of cost. Those who were uninsured or who had a gap in 
coverage were at greatest risk: 60 percent of young adults who were uninsured 
when surveyed and 56 percent of those who had an insurance gap during the year 
did not get needed care because of cost, compared with 29 percent of young 
adults who were insured all year. 
Without Insurance, Young 
Adults Lose Contact with Health Care Providers 
While 85 percent of 
young adults with continuous insurance coverage reported having a regular doctor 
or place of care, that rate fell to 72 percent for those with gaps in coverage 
during the year and to 38 percent for those without insurance at the time of the 
survey. Similarly, rates of preventive care, including weight and blood pressure 
checks, were lower for those with any coverage gaps and continued to drop for 
young adults without insurance. 
Timely use of dental care also varied 
depending on whether young adults had insurance. Young adults who were 
continuously insured under a plan that included dental coverage had the highest 
rates of dental care: three-quarters (76%) had had a dental check-up in the past 
year. Only 54 percent of those who had a gap in their insurance coverage in the 
past year and just 28 percent of those who were uninsured at the time of the 
survey had had a dental exam. 
Affordability a Major Barrier to 
Health Care for Young Adults 
The report findings suggest that young 
adults are likely to enroll in health plans in large numbers when new affordable 
options become available under the Affordable Care Act in 2014. In addition to 
millions of young adults enrolling in their parentsf policies over the past 
year, nearly two-thirds of working young adults ages 19–29 who were eligible for 
coverage through their jobs enrolled in their employersf health plans. The main 
reasons for not taking up employer coverage included being covered under a 
parentfs or spousefs policy or not being able to afford the coverage. Just 6 
percent of young adults said they did not need coverage. 
gClearly, young 
adults recognize the value of health insurance that provides protection against 
burdensome medical debt and access to needed health care,h said Commonwealth 
Fund President Karen Davis. gThe Affordable Care Act will provide all Americans 
with affordable coverage, and help young adults achieve healthy, productive, and 
financially secure futures.h 
The report by Commonwealth Fund researchers 
Sara Collins, Ruth Robertson, Tracy Garber, and Michelle Doty, is the third in a 
series called Tracking Trends in Health System Performance that The Commonwealth 
Fund will release over the next several years. Subsequent surveys will revisit 
the same respondents to track their experiences as the Affordable Care Act is 
implemented. 
  
  
    Methodology  This is the third report 
      based on a new series of longitudinal, nationally representative online 
      tracking surveys launched by The Commonwealth Fund this year that will 
      follow randomly selected panels of adults to examine changes in their 
      health insurance coverage and health care as the Affordable Care Act is 
      implemented. 
              The Commonwealth Fund Health Insurance 
      Tracking Survey of Young Adults, 2011, was conducted online between 
      November 4 and November 24, 2011, by Knowledge Networks, among a 
      representative sample of adults ages 19 to 29. The survey sample was drawn 
      from KnowledgePanel—a probability-based online panel that is 
      representative of the U.S. population and includes cell-phone only and 
      low-income households that are typically difficult to reach using 
      traditional telephone surveys and random digit dialing (RDD) sampling. 
      
              The survey was completed by 1,863 respondents, 
      yielding a 54 percent completion rate among sampled respondents. 
      Statistical results are weighted to correct for the studyfs sample design 
      and for survey nonresponse. The sample is representative of the 
      approximately 46.6 million U.S. adults ages 19 to 29. The survey has an 
      overall margin of sampling error of +/– 3 percentage points at the 95 
      percent confidence level.                |