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America
One in six lacks health coverage
Number of US uninsured rises to 43.6 million in 2002
By Kate Randall
3 October 2003
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A key barometer of the well-being of a society is its ability
to provide for the health of its citizens. New figures on the
numbers of uninsured Americans show that the US is failing miserably.
In a country where the right to universal health care does not
exist, one in six men, women and children had no health coverage
last year.
According to a Sept. 29 report from the US Census Bureau, 2.4
million more people in the US found themselves without medical
insurance in 2002, raising the total to 43.6 millionor a
shocking 15.2 percent of the population. The report on the uninsured
follows on the heels of a Sept. 26 Census Bureau report showing
that the ranks of Americans living in poverty rose by 1.7 million
in 2002, to 34.6 million people.
Every region of the country was affected by this health care
crisis, with the South having the highest percentage of uninsured17.5
percent. The Midwest had the lowest levels, with 11.7 percent
uninsured, while the West had 17.1 percent and the Northeast 17.1
percent. Minnesota had the lowest level of uninsured, 8 percent,
while Texas had the highest, 24.1 percent.
About 8.5 million childrenor 11.6 percent of those under
age 18are uninsured, accounting for about one fifth of the
total. When a childs parent loses insurance, he or she does
so as well unless the child can qualify for Medicaid, which provides
limited insurance for the poor. Federal budget cuts, however,
have affected Medicaid benefits, which are administered through
the states. Genevieve M. Kenney, an economist at the Urban Institute
in Washington, D.C., told the New York Times, Many
states, in the midst of a fiscal crisis, have reduced efforts
to locate and enroll children eligible for Medicaid.
Despite the Medicaid program, more than 10 million people living
below the official poverty lineor about 30 percent of the
poorhad no health insurance last year. Those living in poverty
accounted for about one quarter of the total number of uninsured.
Half of those people with full-time jobsbut whose incomes
place them below the poverty levelwere uninsured.
And as more and more adults and children lose medical coverage,
they find fewer safety net alternatives to catch them.
In Texas, for example, where close to a quarter of residents have
no health insurance, state authorities have cut back on Medicaid
and the Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP) this year.
The numbers of African-Americans and non-Hispanic whites without
insurance rose last year to 20.2 percent and 10.7 percent, respectively.
While the figure for Hispanics was unchanged from the prior year,
it remained at an alarmingly high rate32.4 percent.
About one third of the foreign-born population in the US has
no medical insurance. Of the 20.6 million non-citizens, 8.9 million
were uninsuredor about 43 percent; 17.5 percent of naturalized
citizens lack coverage.
The jump in the loss of coveragethe largest increase
in a decadeis mainly attributable to job cuts, scaled-back
benefits provided by employers, and huge increases in premiums
charged by insurance companies. Because people must rely on employer-sponsored
health insuranceor purchase it privately at exorbitant coststhe
loss of a job often means not only lost income but lost medical
coverage as well. At least 11 million US workers remain jobless,
the highest figure in a decade, and 3.3 million jobs have been
lost in the private sector since the beginning of the recession
in March 2001.
However, being employed does not necessarily translate into
having health insurance. The proportion of employees covered by
health insurance also dropped to 61.3 percent in 2002, from 63.6
percent in 2000. Last year, 897,000 more full-time workers became
uninsured, rising to a new high of 19.9 million full-time workersor
45 percent of all those without health insurance.
Middle-income householdsthose with annual incomes of
$25,000 to $75,000saw the largest increase in lack of health
coverage. Among these households, where at least one family member
is working, the number of uninsured rose by 1.4 million, to 21.5
million, with the sharpest increase among those families earning
$25,000 to $50,000.
Small and medium-sized businesses are paring down health insurance
for employees, charging higher premiums and requiring workers
to pay larger co-payments for prescription drugs, office visits,
and hospital and other costs. Fees charged by private health care
companies have spiraled out of control in recent years, with health
care costs rising by 14 percent in the past year alone, causing
businesses to either eliminate health insurance plans for workers
or decrease coverage.
At companies with fewer than 25 employees, only 30.8 percent
of workers had health coverage in 2002, down from 31.3 percent
in 2001. At companies with 25-99 employees, coverage also dropped,
from 56.8 percent in 2001 to 54.4 in 2002. Coverage for workers
at companies with more than 1,000 employees also declined by about
a percentage point, to 68.7 percent.
While smaller businesses struggle with soaring health care
costs, large corporations are increasingly exploiting the health
care crisis with the aim of reaping more profits by slashing benefits
for their workforces. Case in point: Wal-Mart Storesthe
nations biggest private employer with 1.16 million workers.
Wal-Mart utilizes a team of six people to search each state for
the lowest-cost networks of doctors and hospitals. It then offers
the most cut-rate level of medical insurance to its employees.
The retail giant requires new workers to wait six months to
sign up for its health care benefits plan and provides no coverage
for retirees. Some services are simply not covered: flu shots,
eye exams, child vaccinations, chiropractic services, among others.
Deductiblesthe amount the patient must pay before coverage
kicks inrun as high as $1,000. In many cases, workers are
not covered for pre-existing conditions for the first year of
employment. Wal-Mart also charges employees $50 every two weeks
to cover spouses eligible for medical insurance elsewhere.
The Wall Street Journal cites the case of Larry Allen,
47, and his wife Jacque, who were hired at a Las Vegas Wal-Mart
store last year. They each earned only $8 an hour as produce clerks
and chose to forgo coverage, which averages $13 every two weeks
(while carrying a $1,000 deductible). However, Allen suffered
a heart attack soon after he began working and ran up $31,000
in medical bills and is constantly hounded by collection agencies.
The case indicates the plight faced by the 43 million in the
US with no health coverage and the millions more with inadequate
benefits. In increasing numbers, working people and their families
are forced to choose between the necessities of lifefood,
housing utilities, transportationand medical care. By contrast,
five members of the Walton family, which owns Wal-Mart, were recently
cited in the top 10 of the Forbes list of the 400 richest Americans,
with fortunes of more than $18 billion each.
Working and poor Americans can expect little relief from health
care costs from the Bush administration or the Democrats and Republicans
in Congress. The House of Representatives last week approved a
$368 billion war budget for the Pentagon, but Congress has yet
to pass any reform to the Medicare program to provide even the
most minimal prescription drug benefits for seniors.
Congress has also consistently blocked passage of any kind
of universal health plan, but pushed through a Bush-sponsored
tax cut earlier this year, giving every US millionaire a tax cut
averaging $93,500.
The latest figures on the growth in the ranks of the uninsured
are an indictment of a system that is witnessing an ever-widening
gap between the super-wealthy and the mass of working people struggling
to meet basic, everyday needs.
See Also:
The politics of US Medicare
reform: cynicism, cowardice and social reaction
[30 June 2003]
US: New attacks on Medicare
and Medicaid
[22 January 2003]
Bush administration
proposes crippling cuts in Medicare
[10 October 2002]
Another debacle for
US health care: Congress fails to adopt prescription coverage
for the elderly
[9 August 2002]
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