Experts say job losses pose new problems in era of rising costs. Since Hillary Clinton unsuccessfully led the charge for national health care reform when she was first lady in 1994, about 9 million more Americans — most of whom are working — are without health insurance. That finding and others in a new University of Minnesota report offer a state-by-state picture of people foregoing insurance because of rising costs and lack of income. ‘The case for reform couldn’t be clearer,’ Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, president and CEO of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, said in a news release from the organization, which focuses on health and health-care issues. ‘Further inaction means that costs rise, businesses struggle and workers go without. As high as the numbers of uninsured people seem to be, they don’t even reflect the current crisis, with millions of Americans losing their jobs, which puts their insurance status in jeopardy. And the more people who become uninsured, the harder it is on our health-care system.’ The report, ‘At the Brink: Trends in America’s Uninsured 1994-2007,’ found increases in uninsured residents, rising financial burdens for workers and decreases in private coverage in every state: […]
Saturday, March 28th, 2009
One in Five Working Adults Said to Lack Health Insurance
Author:
Source: Forbes/HealthDay News
Publication Date: 03.26.09, 08:00 PM EDT
Link: One in Five Working Adults Said to Lack Health Insurance
Source: Forbes/HealthDay News
Publication Date: 03.26.09, 08:00 PM EDT
Link: One in Five Working Adults Said to Lack Health Insurance
Stephan: We do not have health care in the United States, we have an illness profit industry. And these millions of people suffer, even when healthy, because of the stress of not having recourse to medical treatments they might need and which, elsewhere, are considered a basic human right. Once again we have made profit the highest value of the state; it blights our national character.