By Joyzelle Davis, Rocky Mountain
News Less than half of lower-income working families
receive health insurance from their employers, a 9 percent drop in the
past decade, according to a study released Wednesday.
Some 47 percent of parents nationwide earning less than $40,000 are
offered health insurance from their employers, while offers of health
insurance to families earning $80,000 or more have held steady at 78
percent during the same period.
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation released the report as Congress
debates reauthorizing the state Children's Health Insurance Program, or
SCHIP, which provides each state with federal funds to design a health
insurance plan for children not poor enough for Medicaid but not earning
enough to buy private insurance.
"SCHIP funds are the only thing that has mitigated the increase in
uninsured because employers aren't providing as much health care," said
Anne Warhover, chief executive of the Colorado Health Foundation. She was
joined by leaders of groups including the Colorado Association of Commerce
and Industry and the head of Children's Hospital, who met Wednesday to
show support for reauthorization of the federal program.
Some 20 percent of Colorado's 4.7 million residents don't have
insurance. In a state that had a 4.1 percent unemployment rate in January,
that indicates a large number of working Coloradans don't have
insurance. Copyright 2007, Rocky Mountain News. All Rights Reserved. |