More in US lacking health insurance
Despite jobs recovery, CDC reports increase
by Vicki Kemper, Los Angeles Times, July 1, 2004
WASHINGTON -- The economy started creating jobs again last year, but
the number of working-age adults who had gone without health insurance
for more than a year jumped sharply, the government reported yesterday.
An additional 2.6 million people between the ages of 18 and 64 were uninsured
for more than a year, boosting the total to 24.5 million, according to
the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The report, released by the agency's National Center for Health Statistics,
is the government's first statistical look at health coverage in 2003,
when the economy began reversing the job losses that started with the
2001 recession.
The increase in the number of the nation's long-term uninsured, which
Robin A. Cohen of the health statistics center called ''quite a significant
jump," underscored the decreasing likelihood that a job guarantees
access to health insurance, analysts said.
''As we lose jobs in the manufacturing sector to jobs in the service
economy and small businesses, we're losing the stability of big employers
and replacing it with a much more fragile system," said Diane Rowland,
executive director of the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured.
''Our uninsured problem is becoming more of a permanent problem instead
of a temporary, transitional problem."
Some 20 million US families, or one in seven, had difficulty paying medical
bills last year, according to a report this week by the Center for Studying
Health System Change.
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