Medicaid Expenditures, Enrollment, and Expenditures Per Enrollee (Archives, 1992-2009)
Database Detail
| Name | Medicaid Expenditures, Enrollment, and Expenditures Per Enrollee (Archives, 1992-2009) |
| Summary | Medicaid Expenditures and Enrollment in U.S. States. |
| Additional Background |
This database is now archived. See Related Databases for updated data.
This database reports Medicaid Personal Health Care (PCH) expenditures and component categories. PHC is expressed as the sum of Hospital Care, Physician & Clinical Services, Other Professional Services, Dental Services, Home Health Care, Prescription Drugs and Other Non-durable Medical Products, Durable Medical Products, Nursing Home Care, and Other Health, Residential, and Personal Care. This data is measured in calendar years. Expenditures in this database may not equal those in National Health Expenditures by Type of Service and Source of Funds because the latter is updated annually, while these state-level data are updated every five years. For more information on expenditure categories, see the data source below.
Note: This database is being expanded to include county-level data. We expect to update this in June 2016.
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| Geographic Coverage | States |
| Periodicity | Annually |
| Series Begins/Ends | 1991 - 2009 |
| Data Source | Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. |
| Summary | Medicaid Expenditures and Enrollment in U.S. States. |
| Geographic Coverage | States |
| Series Begins/Ends | 1991 - 2009 |
| Reporting Period | Annually |
| Updated | May 06, 2013 |
| Next update | None |
| Original Source | Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. |
| Number of records | 1,260 |
| Values Missing or Not Reported | 0.3% |
| File Size | 0.3MB |
| Latest data available | Year 2009 |
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Source (APA): |
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This database is now archived. See Related Databases for updated data.
This database reports Medicaid Personal Health Care (PCH) expenditures and component categories. PHC is expressed as the sum of Hospital Care, Physician & Clinical Services, Other Professional Services, Dental Services, Home Health Care, Prescription Drugs and Other Non-durable Medical Products, Durable Medical Products, Nursing Home Care, and Other Health, Residential, and Personal Care. This data is measured in calendar years. Expenditures in this database may not equal those in National Health Expenditures by Type of Service and Source of Funds because the latter is updated annually, while these state-level data are updated every five years. For more information on expenditure categories, see the data source below.
Note: This database is being expanded to include county-level data. We expect to update this in June 2016.
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APA
Format or style, from the American Psychological Association, is commonly used for footnotes in behavioral and social science publications. APA citation is an author-year-system. It is one of the most common styles used and taught at colleges and high schools. See here for more details, including APA formatting for bibliographies.Chicago
Format or style (also known as Turabian), created by the University of Chicago, is commonly used for footnotes in history, business, and fine arts and occasionally in the humanities, sciences, and social sciences. The Chicago style has two systems of citation. The author-date system (most common in social sciences and sciences) cites sources parenthetically in the text. The notes and bibliography system (most common in humanities) cites sources in numbered footnotes or endnotes which correspond to a superscript number in the text. See here for more details, including Chicago formatting for bibliographies.MLA
Modern Language Association (MLA) format or style is most commonly used for footnotes in the language arts, cultural studies, liberal arts, and humanities. MLA uses short parenthetical citations within the text that are linked to an alphabetical list of work cited at the end of the document. MLA commonly cites using this format: author's last name, first name, title, publication, edition or chapter, and year. See here for more details, including MLA formatting for bibliographies.AMA
American Medical Association (AMA) format or style is most commonly used for footnotes in medicine, biomedical research, nursing, dentistry, and other life sciences. AMA uses numerical superscript for citing sources in-text and refers to a list at the end of the work. These references appear in sequential order of when the sources were cited, instead of alphabetical order. See here for more details, including AMA formatting for bibliographies.