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Why 47 Million Do Not Have Health
Insurance?
The answer to this question is not because 47 million Americans
cannot get health insurance. The answer is far more complex. There are
millions of Americans who cannot get health coverage due to their health
status. Americans with serious health conditions are often unable to get
policies due to health insurers not issuing a policy to them for fear of
losing money. But those not able to obtain health coverage represent
around 25% of the 47 million uninsured Americans.
Clearly we have a problem with access to health insurance. Thirty one
states have high risk pools that allow individuals with moderate or
serious health conditions to enter in to a high risk pool and obtain
coverage. Check with your state department of insurance to see if a high
risk health pool is available.
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Small employers are rapidly dropping their insurance offerings as prices
continue to rise at a pace more than four times the consumer price index.
More than 40% of employers with fewer than 50 employees do not offer
coverage for medical insurance. Even those employers who offer health
insurance have many employees opting out of the coverage because their
portion is cost prohibitive.
Americans between the ages of 18 and 24 average one in three who go
without medical insurance. Those in this age range go without health
insurance because they cannot afford the coverage or feel they do not need
the coverage.
Children are among the most prevalently represented groups without health
coverage. Children generally cannot coverage on their own. Due to problems
with access for their parent or parents, many children go without
coverage. The State Children's Health Insurance Program was developed to
provide access to children who do not have coverage currently and do not
qualify for Medicaid.
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Many argue that 47 million is too high of a number. There are Americans
counted in this number who are between jobs and do not continue coverage
while in the transition between jobs. A new report by the Congressional
Budget Office (CBO), "How Many People Lack Health Insurance and For
How Long?," suggest the uninsured population as a far more fluid
group than is generally acknowledged: a significant number are chronically
uninsured, but many are without insurance for a short period only.
Regardless of the actual number, as the world's most affluent nation, we
have problems with access to health insurance. Some cannot obtain
insurance, others choose not take insurance and we remain a nation with
costs being shifted from those insured to those uninsured.
~ by Scott Cooper (www.americanhealthadvocate.com).
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