Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Fwd: qotd: New Census data on the uninsured - still 48 million

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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: qotd: New Census data on the uninsured - still 48 million
Date: Tue, 17 Sep 2013 11:14:23 -0700
From: Don McCanne <don@mccanne.org>
To: Quote-of-the-Day <quote-of-the-day@mccanne.org>



United States Census Bureau
September 2013
Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2012
By Carmen DeNavas-Walt, Bernadette D. Proctor, Jessica C. Smith

Highlights

• In 2012, the percentage of people without health insurance decreased
to 15.4 percent from 15.7 percent in 2011. The number of uninsured
people in 2012 was not statistically different from 2011, at 48.0 million.

• Both the percentage and number of people with health insurance
increased in 2012 to 84.6 percent and 263.2 million, up from 84.3
percent and 260.2 million in 2011.

• The percentage of people covered by private health insurance in 2012
was not statistically different from 2011, at 63.9 percent. This is the
second consecutive year that the percentage of people covered by private
health insurance was not statistically different from the previous
year's estimate. The number of people covered by private health
insurance increased in 2012 to 198.8 million, up from 197.3 million in 2011.

• The percentage and number of people covered by government health
insurance increased to 32.6 percent and 101.5 million in 2012 from 32.2
percent and 99.5 million in 2011.

• The percentage and number of people covered by employment-based health
insurance in 2012 were not statistically different from 2011, at 54.9
percent and 170.9 million.

• The percentage and number of people covered by Medicaid in 2012 were
not statistically different from 2011, at 16.4 percent and 50.9 million.
The percentage and number of people covered by Medicare increased in
2012 to 15.7 percent and 48.9 million, from 15.2 percent and 46.9
million in 2011.

• Since 2009, Medicaid has covered more people than Medicare.

• In 2012, the percentage and number of uninsured children under age 18
decreased to 8.9 percent and 6.6 million, down from 9.4 percent and 7.0
million in 2011. In 2012, the uninsured rate for children in poverty,
12.9 percent, was higher than the uninsured rate for children not in
poverty, 7.7 percent.

• The rate and number of uninsured non-Hispanic Whites in 2012 were not
statistically different from 2011, at 11.1 percent and 21.6 million. The
rate and the number of uninsured Blacks in 2012 were also not
statistically different from 2011, at 19.0 percent and 7.6 million.

• The percentage of uninsured Hispanics decreased in 2012 to 29.1
percent, down from 30.1 percent in 2011. The number of uninsured
Hispanics in 2012 was not statistically different from 2011, at 15.5
million.

http://www.census.gov/prod/2013pubs/p60-245.pdf


Comment: Supporters of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) have been
touting the improvement in our health care system since the legislation
was signed into law three years ago. Well, that improvement does not
apply to the numbers remaining uninsured since the minimal gains have
been offset by losses, and so we still have 48 million people uninsured.
That doesn't even consider all of the injustices that remain in the
maldistribution of coverage.

Of course, next year's numbers should be different. The introduction of
state health insurance exchanges with government subsidies to help
purchase plans and pay medical bills, plus the expansion in the Medicaid
program, will reduce the numbers of uninsured. However, when Obamacare
is fully implemented, the CBO estimates that 31 million people will
remain uninsured. That's a reduction of only slightly over one-third of
today's 48 million - hardly a success story for health care reform that
was supposed to provide everyone with some form of insurance coverage.

If we had a single payer improved-Medicare-for-all program, the number
of uninsured would not be 48 million, it would not be 31 million, it
would be zero!

(The full Census Bureau report also includes unsettling income and
poverty data. Although PNHP's activism is limited to health care, there
is so much more that needs to be done. All Americans need to make social
justice our leading national priority.)

Read PNHP's press release for a brief analysis of the health insurance
implications of today's Census Bureau report:

'Stronger medicine than Obamacare needed to end uninsured crisis':
health expert

http://www.pnhp.org/news/2013/september/stronger-medicine-than-obamacare-needed-to-end-uninsured-crisis-health-expert

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