For Immediate
Release
September 30, 2003 |
NASW Communications
Lahne Mattas-Curry
202-336-8228
lcurry@naswdc.org
|
Many Americans Lack
Adequate Health Insurance
Social workers urge
Congress to increase coverage
Washington—The number
of Americans who lack sufficient health care coverage rose 5.7
percent to 43.6 million in 2002 according to data released by
the U.S. Census Bureau. According to the report, 15.2 percent
of Americans were uninsured, an increase for the second year
in a row. This is the largest decrease in health care coverage
since 1992.
“Social workers urge
lawmakers to increase health care coverage to uninsured and underinsured
people until universal health and mental health coverage is achieved,” says
Elizabeth J. Clark, executive director of the National Association
of Social Workers (NASW).
“Due to the lagging
economy and people losing jobs, it’s no surprise that there is
an increase in the poverty rate and an increase in both uninsured
and underinsured Americans,” she adds.
“It’s not just low-wage
earners who are uninsured, but those workers who can no longer
afford employee benefits as those costs continue to rise,” Clark
states. “Even though states continue to provide coverage through
Medicaid or CHIP, without more federal funding, it’s difficult
to see how that can continue long-term with state budget deficits
increasing,” she adds.
NASW supports a national
health care policy that ensures the right to universal access
to a continuum of health and mental health care to promote wellness,
maintain optimal health, prevent illness and disability, treat
health conditions, ameliorate the effects of unavoidable incapacities,
and provide long-term and end-of-life care.
For more information
on NASW’s legislative agenda and social work’s role in promoting
sound social policies, please go to https://www.socialworkers.org/advocacy/default.asp
To read more about social
work and health care, go to http://www.socialworkers.org/pressroom/features/issue/health.asp
The National Association of Social Workers (NASW),
in Washington, DC, is the largest membership organization of professional
social workers with 150,000
members. It promotes, develops and
protects the practice of social work and social workers. NASW also
seeks to enhance the well being of individuals, families and
communities through its advocacy.
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