
Percentage
of Uninsured in Utah Increases
May
2, 2006
Nationally,
46 million Americans, including
more than 8 million children,
are living without health insurance.
Mirroring national trends, the
2005 Utah Health Status Survey
(UHSS) conducted by the Utah
Department of Health (UDOH) found
an increase in both the number
and percentage of Utahns who
lacked any kind of health insurance.
The most recent survey results
indicate that between 2004 and
2005 Utah's uninsured population
has grown from an estimated 251,500
(10.6%) to 292,800 (11.6%).
"This translates to about
41,300 additional Utahns without
health insurance," said
David N. Sundwall, M.D., Executive
Director, UDOH, and co-chair
of Governor Huntsman's Health
Insurance for the Uninsured Workgroup. "The
Governor's Workgroup has been
meeting with key stakeholders
and business representatives
around the state in order to
find out the extent of the problems
and what will work in Utah to
address the issue."
The following
groups of Utahns were more likely
to lack health insurance:
· Young
adults aged 19 to 26 (23.3%
lacked health insurance).
· Utahns with household
incomes at or below 200%
of the poverty level (23.4% lacked health
insurance). Over two-thirds
(68.8%) of uninsured Utahns lived in
these households at or near the federal
poverty level.
· Adult Utahns who did not
have a high school diploma
(47.4%).
· Utahns who were of Hispanic
or Latino ethnicity (37.4%).
The majority of Utahns who had
health insurance received it
through a current or former or
employer or union (77.5%). However
this percentage has decreased
over the past few years while
the percentage of persons receiving
insurance through Medicaid (8.7%),
Medicare (10.6%), or CHIP (5.9%)
has been increasing. About one-third
(27.5%) of the uninsured had
access to an employer sponsored
insurance plan, but declined
because of cost or people did
not think they needed health
insurance.
Uninsured Utahns were less likely
to have had a usual source of
medical care (68.2% vs. 96.2%
for those with coverage) or a
routine medical visit in the
last year (57.8% vs. 72.6% for
those with coverage). Utahns
who lack health insurance were
also more likely to seek primary
care from an emergency department
or urgent care center (9.5% vs.
4.9%). One-third of uninsured
Utahns reported difficulty receiving
needed medical care because of
cost, and 13.6% reported that
they did not have enough money
for food, heat or other basic
necessities after paying for
prescription medications.
Factors contributing to an increase
in uninsured Utahns include the
percentage of employers who offer
health insurance, the cost of
insurance premiums to employers,
employees, and individual purchasers,
rising costs of health care locally
and nationally and general economic
conditions affecting individuals
and businesses.
The UHSS is a statewide household
survey conducted by the UDOH
to measure health insurance status
and health care access on an
annual basis. It is representative
of the non-institutionalized
Utah population living in households
with telephones.
For a copy of the Utah Health
Status Update Uninsured in Utah
2005, visit: http://ibis.health.utah.gov/home/opha_publications_chron.html
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