Title: Health Insurance and Health Care in Wyoming
1Health Insurance and Health Care in Wyoming
Rex E. Gantenbein, Ph.D., Center for Rural Health
Research and Education Mary E. Burman, Ph.D., Fay
W. Whitney School of Nursing
2Overview
- Consequences of being uninsured
- How does a lack of insurance affect people?
- Why arent more people covered?
- Arent there public programs for health care?
- Research findings
- Who are the uninsured in America, and in Wyoming?
- What are the reasons for being uninsured?
- What can be done?
- Special interest population Young adults
3Does lack of insurance affect access to health
care?
- Lack of coverage means decreased access to care
and increased risk - The uninsured are more likely to postpone or
forego treatment, even for serious conditions - Many uninsured cannot follow recommended
treatments or fill prescriptions - Uninsured are less likely to have a regular
source of care
4How do the uninsured pay for medical care?
- Uninsured are often low-income, so medical bills
can have a serious impact on family finances - Only about 35 of uninsured care costs are paid
by uninsured - Most of remainder is uncompensated care
- Estimated 41,000,000,000 in 2004
- 85 of this paid by government sources
5Is the problem getting worse?
- Number of uninsured has grown in the last five
years - Rates were stable (and even declined briefly) in
mid-to-late 1990s - Increased employer coverage due to good economy
- Medicare enrollment stabilized due to welfare
reform - Stalling of economic growth has resulted in
increases - Over five million more Americans became uninsured
between 2000 and 2003
6Why arent more working people covered?
- 27,000,000 workers were not covered in 2003
(increase of 1,000,000 over previous year) - Not all businesses offer health benefits to
workers or their families - Not all workers qualify for coverage
- Many employees cannot afford their share of the
premiums
7Why arent more working people covered?
- Small businesses are less likely to offer
insurance to their employees - Fewer than 2/3 of businesses with fewer than 200
employees offer health insurance - Small businesses often require a higher share of
premium cost from employees - Part-time workers are usually not eligible for
benefits
8Why arent more working people covered?
- Health coverage varies by industry and type of
occupation - Uninsured rate among agriculture and construction
is around 38 - Public administration (government) rate is around
6 - Over 80 of uninsured workers are in blue-collar
jobs
9What is Medicaids role?
- Medicaid covers three main groups of non-elderly,
low-income people - Children (over half of beneficiaries)
- Parents (if eligible under state guidelines)
- People with disabilities
- Most single or childless adults are not eligible
for Medicaid, no matter how poor
10What can be done?
- If we can understand the nature of the problem,
we may be able to develop policy to address it - Who are the uninsured?
- Why are they uninsured?
- What solutions might help?
112002-2003 Wyoming Insurance Study (State Planning
Grant)
- Wyoming Department of Health received funding
from Health Resources and Services Administration
to undertake a Wyoming-specific study of
uninsured - UW was subcontractor for research and strategic
planning - Mission was to understand Wyomings uninsured
population and develop a strategic plan to reduce
their number
12Research Plan
- The Wyoming insurance study was designed to
answer these questions - Who are the uninsured in Wyoming and how do they
compare to national demographics? - Why are they uninsured and how long have they
been uninsured? - What might enable employers to offer insurance to
more employees and their dependents? - What is the economic impact on individual
communities and the State as a result of lack of
coverage? - What options would result in the highest number
of people being able to afford coverage? -
13Research Activities
- Data Collection Analysis
- Baseline data from national research
- Statewide household and employer surveys (with
comments) - Focus groups
- Interviews with key informants
- Group quarters interviews
14National baseline data
15Who are the uninsured?
- Most Americans under 65 who have health insurance
coverage receive it as an employer benefit - Americans over 65 are covered by Medicare
- Some non-elderly, low-income people qualify for
Medicaid, SCHIP or other state-subsidized programs
16Who are the uninsured?
- 45,000,000 Americans were without health
insurance coverage in 2003! - 18 of the nonelderly population (1 increase
from 2002) - More than 80 of the uninsured came from working
families - Most of these have one or more full-time workers
in the household
17Who are the uninsured?
- Among poor people, the uninsured rate is 36
(twice the average) - Poor is defined as under 100 of the federal
poverty level -- 14,348 for a family of 3 in
2002) - The near-poor (100-200 of FPL) are also at risk
(30 uninsured) - Often ineligible for Medicaid
- These two income groups account for two-thirds of
uninsured
18Who are the uninsured?
- Majority of uninsured adults (59) have gone
without coverage for two years or longer - Adults are more likely to be uninsured than
children - Most low-income children qualify for Medicaid or
SCHIP (State Childrens Insurance Program) - Adults do not qualify for Medicaid unless they
are pregnant, disabled, or have dependent children
19Table 5.5 Race and Incidence of Uninsured,
1987-2000
Minorities are more likely than whites to be
uninsured.
Hispanic
Non-Hispanic American Indian
Non-Hispanic Asian
Non-Hispanic Black
Total
Non-Hispanic White
Note Under 65 population. Source Tabulations
of the March Current Population Survey files by
Actuarial Research Corporation, incorporating
their historical adjustments.
20Rural uninsured
- 17 of non-elderly rural population are uninsured
- Remote rural areas (not adjacent to an urban
county) have even higher risk (24) - Rural residents tend to be uninsured for longer
periods than urbanites
21Rural uninsured
- Why are risks higher in rural areas?
- More remote rural residents come from low-income
families - Rural residents are less likely to be offered
health benefits through employment - Rural/remote rural residents are just as likely
as urban workers to enroll in programs if
offered, however
22Results from Wyoming research
23Initial findings from household survey (late 2002)
- 5,511 responses to survey (mail and phone)
- 14.1 of Wyomings residents are uninsured
70,217 people - 14.5 of adults about 53,000
- 13.1 of children (18 and under) about 17,000
24Uninsured percentage by county
County Mean 12.08
The counties in gray have above mean of
uninsured, representing about 1/3 of Wyomings
population.
25Uninsured individuals by age(from household
survey)
26Uninsured by household income
27Uninsured individualsLength of time Since last
insured
28Uninsured individuals takeup of employer coverage
- 9.2 of households reported someone in the
household is eligible for employer coverage but
is not enrolled - 38.9 of those said reason is they cannot afford
it
29Uninsured individuals takeup of employer coverage
- 19.4 of uninsured report someone in the
household is eligible for employer coverage but
is not enrolled - 61.4 of these people say reason is they cannot
afford it
30 of uninsured individuals by household per
capita incomeAge 0 to 4 years
31 of uninsured individuals by household per
capita income Age 19 to 24 years
32 of uninsured individuals by household per
capita income Age 25 to 34 years
33 of uninsured individuals by household per
capita income Age 35 to 44 years
34 of uninsured individuals by size of firm where
employed(from household surveys)
35Focus Groups, Key Informant Interviews and Survey
Comments
- 13 focus groups (with physicians interviewed
individually) - Uninsured persons, small employers and health
care providers - Statewide with 82 different people
- 16 Key informant interviews
- Insurance industry leaders, safety net providers,
business and health leaders, professional
organization directors/officers. - Mail and telephone survey comments
- 610 pages of transcribed data!
36(No Transcript)
37Themes
- Uninsured Persons/Families
- Meeting Health Needs Between and Rock and a Hard
Place - Barriers to Purchase of Health Insurance Money,
money, money - Participation in Public Programs Falling
Through the Cracks
- Root Causes of Uninsurance Health Care Costs and
Low Wages - Solutions No Silver Bullet
- Employer-based Coverage
- Decisions about Offering Insurance Salary Vs.
Benefits - Decisions about Type of Coverage Playing Around
with Deductible and Premiums - Response to Economic Downtown Increased Employee
Cost-Sharing
38Root Causes Health Care Costs
- Back in 1981 . . . a single policy generally ran
about 45, for a family about 95, which at the
time seemed rather expensive. However, now we
are in 2003 and a single policy has gone from 45
to 358 and family has gone from 95 to 828, so
weve almost seen a 10-fold increase in cost
increase in the cost, total cost of health
insurance in roughly 21, 22 years. (Ralph Hayes,
Employees Group Insurance Program)
39Borger, Smith, Truffer, Keehan, Sisko, Poisal
Clemens, 2006.
40Root Causes Low Wages
- At 185 poverty, their actual income. . . ends
up being around . . . 2000 to 2400 a month.
Now you think of raising a family . . . on that
and all the expenses of rent and insurance on
your car and the whole bit. It really does not
leave money for people to have insurance. (Key
Informant)
41Wyoming Wages, 2004
422006 HHS Poverty Guidelines
SOURCEÂ Federal Register, Vol. 71, No. 15,
January 24, 2006, pp. 3848-3849 .
According to US Census, official poverty rate is
12.5
43Table 5.6 The Uninsured by Age, 1987-2000
Most of the uninsured are adults 18-54.
Note Under 65 population. Source Tabulations
of the March Current Population Survey files by
Actuarial Research Corporation, incorporating
their historical adjustments.
44Meeting Health Needs Between a Rock and a Hard
Place
- Impact of Being Uninsured
- You live paycheck to paycheck.
- (Uninsured Person)
- Illness Behavior
- I take 3 aspirin and if Im still alive 3 days
later (Uninsured Person) - I started taking medication for bipolar But I
weaned myself off of it because I know Im not
going to be able to get it And Im just winging
it Just do each day as it comes. (Uninsured
Person)
45Table 5.4 Income and Incidence of Uninsured,
1987-2000
Lower-income groups are more likely to be
uninsured than higher-income groups.
lt100 of Federal Poverty Level
100-200 of Federal Poverty Level
Total
200 of Federal Poverty Level
Note Under 65 population. Source Tabulations
of the March Current Population Survey files by
Actuarial Research Corporation, incorporating
their historical adjustments.
46Table 5.10 Impact on Non-Elderly Adults of Being
Uninsured, 2000
The uninsured face financial and other barriers
to health care.
Note Among adults under age 65. Source
NewsHour with Jim Lehrer/Kaiser Family
Foundation, National Survey on the Uninsured,
April 2000.
47Admission Rates for Avoidable Hospital Conditions
by Uninsured vs. Privately Insured
Adjusted Relative Rates
48Managing Care for the Uninsured
- It impacts me limiting the number of laboratory
tests and x-rays that I might order to just the
bare essentials choosing the medication based on
what I have available for samples rather than
based on what I think is the best drug
clinically. (Physician) - If someone comes in with cardiac chest pain who
may need a stress test or cardiac cath, theres
no way to pay for that. (Nurse Practitioner)
49Local Safety Nets
- Hospitals
- Community clinics
- Private physician offices
- Other agencies
- Intact, but endangered (IOM, 2000)
50Patients by Revenue Source Physicians and
Federally Qualified Health Centers
51Dobie, Hagopian, Kirlin Hart, 2005.
52Dobie, Hagopian, Kirlin Hart, 2005.
53Barriers to Purchase of Health Insurance Money
- Moderator Id like for you to tell me the main
reason you do not have insurance? - Margie Money
- Bob Money
- Kathy Money
- Richard Money
- Veronica No money
- Susan Money
54Barriers to Purchase of Health Insurance (Cont.)
- I only had one job ever in this town where I had
benefits included in the job. (Uninsured Person) - But see even my pay at 7.50 an hour, 40 hours a
week, I couldnt afford 80 every two weeks for
the premium. (Uninsured Person)
55Table 5.1 Out-of-Pocket Spending by the Under 65
Population by Insurance Status by Income,
1996-1998
The percent of health spending from out-of-pocket
sources by the uninsured is significantly higher
than for those with insurance.
Uninsured
Insured
Percent of Health Spending Out-of-Pocket
Percent of Health Spending Out-of-Pocket
Note Insured includes all types of insurance
coverage. Source Actuarial Research Corporation
tabulations of Medical Expenditure Panel Survey.
56Employees
SPG, 2003
57Participation in Public Programs Falling Through
the Cracks
- When I had all this problem going on with my
teeth, I had gone to the Welfare Department and
asked them, Isnt there anybody that can help
me? And they said, Helen, we would pay for
everything if you had your children living with
you. But because my children live with my
ex-husband they wouldnt. And I dont know what
difference that makes. My income doesnt go up
any more. (Uninsured Person)
58Significant Gaps in Medicaid Coverage
- In over half of states, woman working full-time
at minimum wage job with 2 children would have
too much income to be eligible for Medicaid. - Women without children not eligible in 40 states,
despite being low-income.
59Employers Decisions about Insurance Salary Vs.
Benefits
- An employee lives on what he makes and.. If it
costs him 8 an hour to live and hes making 8
an hour, and then were going to take .25 an
hour out of your paycheck to cover the overage of
insurance, all the sudden hes in the negative.
He cant make his house payment, or he cant make
this or that and then It ends up coming out of
the employers pocket one way or the other.
(Small Employer)
60Employers Decisions about Insurance Salary Vs.
Benefits
- We have also seen that as a company we battle
the premium war trying to decide. Those decisions
are made at the corporate level, but still our
company battles what percentage of cost to pass
on to our employees to still be offering a
benefit thats meaningful to our employees, yet
doesnt bankrupt our organization or keep us from
doing other things. (Employer Key Informant)
61Employers (from employer survey)
- 72.2 of states employers offer health insurance
to their full-time employees - Fewer than 10 offer it to part-time
- 64.3 offer it to dependents of full-time
- Fewer than 9 pay all or part of insurance costs
for retirees
SPG, 2003
62Employers Not Providing Insurance
- Cost was so excessive for a few employees.
(Small Employer) - A lot of employers opt out because . . . if
youve got 20 employees, my paperwork that I
would submit would be that thick because I have
to do a census on every employee and each of
their dependents and their health conditions, who
they see, and what medication theyre on . . .
Some employers dont want to go through the
hassle. (Small Employer)
63Employers
SPG, 2003
64Employers
SPG, 2003
65Decisions about Types of Coverage Deductibles
and Premiums
- We have a 250 deductible and a 500 deductible.
. . This year we offered to do a 1000 deductible
but after the employee uses the first 500 of the
deductible, we will pay the second 500. . . We
really felt that would save us rather than . . .
paying for the 500 deductible. (Small Employer)
66Responses to Economic Downturns Increase
Employee Cost-sharing
- I agree. . . with everyone else that I will
offer benefits as long as I can. With us, we
have a separate dental that might go first, or I
would ask the employees to pay all of the
premiums, but that would be before the health
insurance. (Small Employer)
67Table 1.4 Sources of Health Insurance Coverage
for the Under 65 Population, 1980-2000
Over the last two decades, private coverage has
declined, public coverage has stayed about the
same, and the uninsured have grown.
Any Private
74
ESI
69
Uninsured
16
Any Government
14
9
Medicaid
Notes ESI - Employer Sponsored Insurance. Any
Private includes ESI and individually purchased
insurance. Any government includes Medicare for
the disabled population. Source Tabulations of
the March Current Population Survey files by
Actuarial Research Corporation, incorporating
their historical adjustments.
68Table 4.6 Employee Contributions to Health
Insurance Premiums, 1988-2001
Employees are paying a higher dollar value, but
smaller share of theirhealth insurance premiums.
Percentage of Premium Paid by Covered Employees,
1988-2001
Average Monthly Employee Contribution, 1988-2001
Source Kaiser/HRET Survey of Employer-Sponsored
Health Benefits 2000, 2001 KPMG Survey of
Employer-Sponsored Health Benefits 1988, 1993,
1996.
69Solutions Across the Political Spectrum
- The problem of out-of-control drug and medical
services which were caused by the government
meddling in the first place. All this is heading
to is more socialist programs to have the
taxpayer subsidize the health program. Where in
our constitution does it guarantee all our
medical needs will be paid by the government?
(Survey participant)
70Solutions Across the Political Spectrum
- We firmly believe something must be done
statewide or nationally. We are farmers and
ranchers. . . We, a couple, pay 788 a month for
a policy with a 5,000 per person deductible.
They tell us its going up another 20 some
percent next year. . . The insurance company we
had dropped all policies in WY, at least thats
what they told us, so we were picked up by
another company. Being upper middle aged and
having some medical problems no other company
will give us insurance without putting riders on
it. . . We are at the mercy of Mother Nature and
the grain and cattle markets. . . We need the
state or nation to address this problem. Why
cant we be put into a statewide group policy to
help get reduced rates? It is not fair for us to
be subsidizing government employees, teachers,
and the poor and have no help in getting
reasonable rates for the rest of us. (Survey
participant)
71Solutions Across the Political Spectrum
- I think the USA should socialize medicine.
There should be free insurance for everybody.
(Survey participant)
72Solutions No Silver Bullet
- Expansion of public programs (Medicaid, SCHIP
(KidCare) - New public programs, e.g., national health
insurance - Supporting, developing and expanding safety net
- Expanding employer-based coverage purchasing
alliances, tax credits, subsidies - Increasing personal responsibility
- Control costs and address HCP shortages
- Tort reform
- Restructuring insurance
73Populations of special interest young adults
74Young adults
- Young adults (19-29) are one of the largest and
fastest-growing segments of the uninsured - Uninsured rate nearly 30,
- Up by 2,000,000 in past decade
75Young adults
- Why are rates higher among young adults?
- Many insurance programs terminate dependent
coverage at 19 - Life transitions change coverage options
(graduation, independence) - Young people have lower incomes, families
76Young adults
- Why is health insurance important to this age
group? - Disrupts access to health care system
- Puts uninsured at risk for high costs in case of
severe illness or injury - Increases risk of problems with acute care
- Pregnancy
- HIV
- Injury
- Chronic diseases (heart, cancer, etc.)
77Young adults
- What can be done to help?
- Extend private insurance eligibility for
dependents through age 23 - Extend eligibility for Medicaid/SCHIP through age
23 - Require that all college students have health
insurance (and that colleges offer it to both
full- and part-time students)
78Questions?
For more information, contact the CRHRE
http//www.health.uwyo.edu
79References and further reading
- Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured
report, The Uninsured A Primer Key Facts
about Americans Without Health Insurance,
November 2004. http//www.kff.org/uninsured/7216.c
fm - Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured
fact sheet, The Uninsured in Rural America,
April 2003. http//www.kff.org/uninsured/kcmu22520
2factsheet.cfm - S.R. Collins, et al., Rite of Passage? Why Young
Adults Become Uninsured and How New Policies Can
Help, The Commonwealth Fund, May 2004.
http//www.cmwf.org/usr_doc/collins_ritepassage.pd
f - T.D. Rowley, The Rural Uninsured Highlights
from Recent Research, Health Resources and
Services Administration, January 2003.
http//ruralhealth.hrsa.gov/policy/uninsured.htm - Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured
report, Sicker and Poorer The Consequences of
Being Uninsured, May 2002. http//www.kff.org/uni
nsured/20020510-index.cfm