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    Dynamique
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    The Uninsured: A Primer

    The Uninsured: A Primer
    Key facts about Americans without health insurance
    The Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured
    December 2010
    https://www.kff.org/uninsured/upload/7451-06.pdf


    Introduction

    The number of nonelderly uninsured Americans rose to
    50.0 million in 2009-an increase of 4.3 million people-
    amidst rising unemployment rates and an economic
    recession. (The Census Bureau reports a total of 50.7
    million uninsured in 2009 which includes 676,000 persons
    who are elderly (65+ years old). This primer focuses on
    the nonelderly uninsured. Our analysis of the Current
    Population Survey's ASEC supplement differs from
    estimates by the Census Bureau in several other ways
    that are outlined in the Data Notes in the back of this
    primer.) Nearly all of the elderly are insured by
    Medicare, yet nearly 700,000 of the elderly were
    uninsured last year. Because the majority of the non-
    elderly still receive their health insurance as a job
    benefit, the steady decline in employer-sponsored health
    coverage since 2000 and the current weak job market
    largely explain the growing numbers of uninsured. The
    safety net of Medicaid and the Children's Health
    Insurance Program (CHIP) has prevented a larger increase
    in the uninsured and, in particular, buffered children
    from the full effects of the recession.Almost one in
    five (19%) of the nonelderly was uninsured in 2009
    (Figure 1).

    The gaps in our health care system affect people of all
    ages, races and ethnicities, and income levels; however,
    those with the lowest income face the greatest risk of
    being uninsured. Despite strong ties to the workforce-
    more than three-quarters of the uninsured come from
    working families-four in ten of the uninsured are
    individuals and families who are poor (incomes less than
    the federal poverty level or $22,050 for a family of
    four in 2009).

    Not having health insurance makes a difference in
    people's access to needed medical care and their
    financial security. The barriers the uninsured face in
    getting the care that they need means they are less
    likely to receive preventive care, are more likely to be
    hospitalized for conditions that could have been
    prevented, and are more likely to die in the hospital
    than those with insurance. The financial impact can also
    be severe. Uninsured families already struggle
    financially to meet basic needs, and medical bills, even
    for minor problems, can quickly lead to medical debt.

    to read the entire report -
    https://www.kff.org/uninsured/upload/7451-06.pdf
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