Essay Topic Hub

Health Insurance
Essays

1,037+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,037 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Health insurance sits at the intersection of economics, public policy, and social equity, making it a central subject in courses ranging from health administration and public policy to sociology and business. The topic asks students to examine how individuals, employers, and governments share the financial risk of medical costs, and why access to coverage remains unevenly distributed. Because it touches on market forces, federal programs like Medicaid, and the lived experiences of vulnerable populations, it raises questions that are both technically complex and ethically urgent.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on specific populations—the elderly, low-income women, uninsured and underinsured young adults, or people managing chronic conditions such as diabetes—to assess how coverage gaps affect health outcomes. Others analyze financing structures, employer benefit costs, or the economics of health plan design. A smaller set takes a policy and reform orientation, examining healthcare legislation, the challenges facing California's health care businesses, or principles of economics applied to marketizing health plans. Case-study and research-critique formats also appear, reflecting the range of methods courses assign.

A strong essay on health insurance needs a clearly bounded thesis—arguing, for instance, how a specific coverage gap affects a defined population rather than broadly surveying the entire system. Evidence drawn from policy data, peer-reviewed studies, and program statistics carries the most weight, especially when it connects cost structures to real access outcomes. The most common pitfall is conflating health insurance with health care itself; keeping that distinction precise throughout the argument demonstrates analytical rigor and prevents overgeneralized conclusions.

1,037 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Higher Salary vs. Better Benefits Would You
When comparing the choice of selecting better benefits and a modest salary (such as working for the government in the civil service or as a teacher) versus a high salary and few benefits (such as working as a commission…
Paper Doctorate
Compare the Healthcare Systems in USA and Haiti
Currently, it's estimated that Haiti spends approximately 11% of its national budget towards health care. Notably, 80% of this amount is spent on salaries with the rest of the amount used for furniture and drugs.
Essay Doctorate
Dental Care in Ethnic Populations Over 65
Dental Care in Ethnic Populations Over 65
Essay Doctorate
Strategic Plan for Non-Profit: Human Rights Campaign
he Human Rights Campaign (HRC) describes itself as the civil rights movement that is largest of all and that is striving to realize equality for individuals who are gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Americans. The Human Rights Campaign was founded in 1980 and is reported to act as advocate for LGBT Americans through mobilization of actions in local communities and through strategic investment toward the election of individuals who are equitable minded into public office. This study addresses the strategic planning process of HRC.
Research Paper Doctorate
Health care systems and policy
Obstacles to change in Health Care management.
Essay High School
Health Insurance and How it Effects the Elderly
The vast majority of American seniors are receiving federal health insurance assistance through the Medicare program, and some are even fortunate enough to afford a commercial health insurance supplement to offset the costs of procedures and treatments Medicare will not cover. Although most seniors in this country are covered under Medicare, one disturbing fact has emerged from decades of government managed health insurance for the nation’s elderly: it is not enough to purchase health insurance, you must understand its provisions in order to derive maximum benefit. Unfortunately, the process of deciphering a government-operated health insurance subsidy plan – or its commercial counterparts offered by private insurance companies – is increasingly defined by dense technical jargon, inaccessible contracts filled with fine print, and collusion between medical suppliers and hospitals to fix the price of basic care components. Just as the tax preparation industry has emerged to help young adults navigate the often inexplicable maze of the modern tax code to file their income tax forms properly, a system of advocacy for the elderly must be instituted which assists them in understanding their health insurance policies during this extremely vulnerable time in their lives. A comprehensive study conducted in 2013 study to assess the ways in which consumers misunderstand their health insurance coverage revealed that “in a question asked of a larger, representative, sample of senior citizens that included about one-third who were actually facing the choice of whether to enroll in Medicare part D, only 30% endorsed the statement that ‘the Medicare Part D program is well designed” (Loewenstein, et al.)
Research Paper Doctorate
Leadership and Management in Health Care
President Clinton's Secretary of Health and Human Services, Donna Shalala, used to tell a story about her mother, who was 86 at the time but still a full-time attorney representing several clients who lived in nursing…
Paper Undergraduate
Women\'s Health Promotion Cervical Cancer
When it comes to staying healthy for women, regular screening for cervical cancer plays an important role. Women who see their doctors regularly for pap smears and other necessary tests reduce their risk of dying from cancer because problems can be caught early. However, many women don't see their doctor often out of fear, lack of insurance, or other reasons. This paper explores cervical cancer and the need for proper screening.
Paper Undergraduate
Uninsured or underinsured individuals and coverage gaps
According to Newport and Mendez (2009) about 17.3% of the American population does not have health insurance. The uninsured are seen in families that work. Studies show that 51% of the families have a working household…
Research Paper Doctorate
African-American View of Healthcare
¶ … Emergency room usage [...] why African-Americans utilize emergency departments instead of primary doctors. What are the age, gender, and income of the African-Americans that come to E.D?