Health and Science banner

Workers are losing health insurance

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009



A new study says employers are passing along the rising cost of health insurance, and more working people are uninsured. In this region that trend is most evident in New Jersey. About 14 percent of New Jersey workers were uninsured is the mid-1990s. By 2007 that number rose to 17 percent, or more than 741,000 people.

Hyman: You have to understand of course, that since that time we've had the economic downturn, thousands of people in the state have lost jobs and with that have lost insurance, so this problem has gotten even more worse than our numbers are able to show.

Andy Hyman is an insurance expert from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which documented trends across more than a decade. The study found that New Jersey residents are paying some of the highest health insurance premiums in the country. Local experts say those insurance costs have risen far faster than worker incomes.

VN:F [1.9.10_1130]
Rate this story:
Rating: 4.0/5 (1 vote cast)
Workers are losing health insurance, 4.0 out of 5 based on 1 rating

One Comment

  • Kim Morris says:

    MedSave.com is hosting a series of social media discussions this week focusing on the four groups most likely to be lacking health insurance in conjunction with national "Cover the Uninsured Week", March 22-28, 2009. Cover the Uninsured is a project of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation that brings together private and public resources across the country committed to this common cause. The project is intended to raise public awareness of the underlying reasons that individuals are uninsured and point to some possible solutions. MedSave.com has helped more than a million people find affordable health insurance since 1997 and has been a participant in Cover the Uninsured Week since 2005. Find more information on this year's scheduled events at http://www.medsave.com/articles/Cover-the-uninsured-week-2009.htm.

    VA:F [1.9.10_1130]
    0
spacer image