[Oct 20, 2006]
The decline in the number of employers
offering health insurance has led to a rise in the percentage of U.S. residents
who are uninsured, according to two issue papers released Thursday by the Kaiser Family
Foundation's Commission on Medicaid and the
Uninsured, CQ HealthBeat reports.
The papers use U.S. Census Bureau figures released in August that found the
percentage of the population who are uninsured rose from 15.6% to 15.9%, or 46.6
million people, in 2005. The Census figures also show that the number of
uninsured children younger than 18 has increased for the first time in seven
years (Hopkins, CQ HealthBeat, 10/19). The reports indicate that
despite an upturn in the economy, the percentage of U.S. workers covered by
employer-sponsored insurance declined from 81.2% in 2001 to 77.4% in 2005 , the
Detroit Free Press
reports (Detroit Free Press, 10/20). In addition, there was
no increase in Medicaid and SCHIP coverage last year to compensate for the
decline in employer-sponsored health care, according to John Holahan, director
of the Health Policy Research Center at the Urban
Institute (CQ HealthBeat, 10/19). Nearly half of the
decline in employer coverage between 2001 and 2005 was due to a decrease in
employer sponsorship; a quarter of the decline was lost eligibility for workers
or dependents; and another quarter was due to an increase in employees not
participating in offered coverage. The analysis found that two-thirds of newly
uninsured employees between 2001 and 2005 were from low-income families (Kaiser
Family Foundation release, 10/19). In addition, the analysis indicates that the
number of uninsured U.S. residents parallels a population shift toward the South
and West, where there are higher rates of uninsured workers than in other
regions of the country (Miami Herald, 10/20).
KCMU also released a primer and fact sheet designed to improve understanding of
health coverage trends and the uninsured population (Kaiser Family Foundation
release, 10/19).