New directions in health insurance design: implications for public policy and practice.(The Public's Health and the Law in the 21st Century: Second Annual Partnership Conference on Public Health Law)
Publication Date: 22-DEC-03
Publication Title: Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics
Format: Online
Author: Pollitz, Karen ; Imhoff, Donna ; Scott, Charles ; Rosenbaum, Sara

Read this article now
Try Goliath Business News - FREE!

You can view this article PLUS...

  • Over 5 million business articles
  • Hundreds of the most trusted magazines, newswires, and journals (see list)
  • Premium business information that is timely and relevant
  • Unlimited Access

Now for a Limited Time, try Goliath Business News
Free for 7 Days!

Tell Me More   Terms and Conditions

Purchase this article for $4.95

Description

Sara Rosenbaum

This is a volatile time for health insurance policy. Medicare and Medicaid are in turmoil, as is the private health insurance market. Public and private health insurance costs constitute eighty percent of healthcare spending in the United States. Public health professionals depend on the insurance system to behave in ways that are responsive to public health in prevention and crisis management.

Karen Pollitz

Seventy-five percent of the American population, excluding the elderly, has coverage through the private health insurance system. Ninety percent of this group receives their insurance through employer-sponsored programs, and the remaining ten percent buy their own coverage. Approximately ten percent of the non-elderly population has insurance through a government program, and fifteen percent of the non-elderly population, almost forty-one million Americans, is uninsured.

The increase in the uninsured is due to a decline in employer-sponsored coverage. Almost ninety-nine percent of extremely large companies offer health benefits to their workers, though only two-thirds of small employers offer coverage, and that number is declining. The Medicaid program has expanded, particularly with the creation of the Children's Health Insurance Program in the late 1990s. However, states are experiencing record fiscal crises, and many Medicaid programs are seeing reductions in funding at the state level.

Trends in the content of coverage also are disturbing. In recent years there has been an aggressive shifting of costs to employees and...



More articles from Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics
The role of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in public health law..., December 22, 2003
New developments in public health case law.(The Public's Health and th..., December 22, 2003
Public health ethics: the voices of practitioners.(The Public's Health..., December 22, 2003
Applying the regulatory powers of public health.(The Public's Health a..., December 22, 2003
The HIPAA Privacy Rule: reviewing the post-compliance impact on public..., December 22, 2003

Looking for additional articles?
Click here to search our database of over 3 million articles.