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Protecting America's Uninsured Home

Program Spotlight

AAMC Principles

Western Region

Midwestern Region

Southern Region

Northeastern Region

AAMC Contact:
Toya Ricks
202-828-0403

Protecting America's Uninsured

Today, a substantial portion of our population lacks adequate health insurance or has no coverage at all. More than 46 million Americans are uninsured and millions more are underinsured. U.S. medical schools and teaching hospitals are a critical component of the national safety net for America's millions of uninsured and underinsured, providing countless community-based programs designed to help working families. From wellness programs, to preventive and primary care medicine, to health education initiatives and emergency care, these services are essential lifelines for the uninsured to America's health care system.

Select a region from the map below to see a listing of programs for the uninsured in that area.


Major teaching hospitals constitute only 6 percent of the nation's hospitals. Yet they provide nearly half of all hospital charity care. The cost of caring for the financially disadvantaged and uninsured borne by America's major teaching hospitals totaled $5.86 billion in 2004. View Charts >>

Program Spotlight

Duke University Medical Center and Health System

The Local Access to Coordinated Healthcare (LATCH) program is a collaborative effort to reach uninsured Durham residents (primarily Latino families) in their homes to educate them about their health conditions and how they can make appropriate use of primary care and preventive health services.

AAMC Principles for the Evaluation of Proposals for the Uninsured

The AAMC has closely monitored the issue of the nation's uninsured, and advocated for potential solutions, for more than a decade. In 2001, the AAMC's Executive Council endorsed a set of principles by which the AAMC and its members can evaluate the potential effectiveness of proposals to reduce the number of uninsured Americans. Read the principles  >>

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