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Health insurance costs rising as fewer jobs offer coverage.
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Author: Unknown
Section: THE NATION
| Health insurance costs rising as fewer jobs offer coverage |
Health news at the national and federal levels
EMPLOYER-BASED health
insurance premiums rose five times the rate of inflation in 2004, and
as health care became less affordable, at least half of all Americans
saw their insurance cut or paid more for doctor visits.
The Kaiser Family
Foundation released a report in September that found that premiums for
employer-sponsored health coverage rose 11.2 percent in 2004, which was
less than 2003's 13.9 percent increase but still the fourth consecutive
year of double-digit price hikes. The 2004 Annual Health Benefit Survey
also found the percentage of workers covered by employer-based
insurance is at 61 percent, down from the recent peak of 65 percent in
2001. The numbers mean at least 5 million fewer jobs are providing
health insurance.
"The cost of family
health insurance is rapidly approaching the gross earnings of a
full-time minimum wage worker," said Kaiser Family Foundation President
Drew Altman. "If these trends continue, workers and employers will find
it increasingly difficult to pay for family health coverage, and every
year the share of Americans who have employer-sponsored health coverage
will fall."
Measures of insurance
coverage and premium costs continue to paint a bleak picture. A report
released Sept. 28 by Families USA found that in 35 states, workers'
share of their insurance premiums rose three times faster than their
earnings even as benefits were cut. Nationally, workers' premium costs
rose 35.9 percent from 2000 to 2004, according to the report, while
average earnings rose only 12.4 percent during the same period.
"Working families
were squeezed by runaway health care costs over the past four years,"
said Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA. "As a result,
workers are paying much more in premiums but are receiving less health
coverage, wages are being depressed and millions of people have lost
health coverage entirely."
The number of
Americans who had total health costs that consumed more than
one-quarter of their earnings rose from 11.6 million in 2000 to 14.3
million in 2004 -- an increase of almost 23 percent. The overwhelming
majority of these people, 10.7 million, had health insurance.
The proportion of
low-income, working-age people with chronic conditions such as asthma
and diabetes who spend more than 5 percent of their income on
out-of-pocket medical costs jumped from 28 percent in 2001 to 42
percent just two years later, according to a late-September study from
the Center for Studying Health Care Change. The study also found that
more than one-third of privately insured, chronically ill people with
incomes below 200 percent of the federal poverty level lived in a
family having problems paying their medical bills.
In yet more
disturbing news, 100 million Americans found their health insurance
benefits cut or costlier in 2004, according to a report from Results
For America, a project of the non-profit Civil Society Institute. The
survey of about 1,000 adults found that 67 percent support guaranteed,
government-sponsored health care.
APHA strongly
supports affordable health care and a single-payer health system that
would provide universal insurance coverage to every American regardless
of income or job status.
A summary of the
Kaiser Family Foundation/Health Research and Education Trust 2004
Annual Employer and Health Benefits Survey is available from <www.kff.org>. The Families USA report, "Health Care: Are You Better Off Today Than You Were Four Years Ago?," is posted at <www.familiesusa.org>. Visit <www.resultsforamerica.org>
to view "Americans and Health Care Reform: How Access and Affordability
Are Shaping Views." The brief on "Rising Health Costs, Medical Debt and
Chronic Conditions" is available from <www.hschange.org>.
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