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HEALTH CARE

West Among Nation’s Highest Uninsured Rates

The industries that drive the West often leave their workers on their own when it comes to health insurance.

By David Frey, 11-05-09

Richard Angus had been managing just fine without health insurance. A careful skier and cyclist, the Glenwood Springs, Colo., resident figured he could avoid the costs of health insurance, and the risks of going without it. Then last year, he contracted a blood infection that nearly cost him his life.

Instead, it cost him his livelihood. Three weeks in the hospital left him with $90,000 in medical bills he says he’ll never be able to pay off. His credit rating trashed, he’s seeking bankruptcy protection to stay afloat.

“You’re very happy that you get home. You’re alive!” says Angus, 48. “Then three months, four months down the road, you have to deal with the bills and the people. You almost wonder why they’re keeping me alive when they’re just going to make my life hell.”

Angus isn’t alone. The West has one of the highest rates of uninsured in the country, due largely to the region’s dominant industries. Apart from lots of small, independent businesses, much of the West is driven by the service sector, which often doesn’t provide health insurance. Neither do many construction contractors, energy industry contractors or agriculture operations.

The West had an uninsured rate of 17.4 percent in 2008, according to a U.S. Census report issued in September, compared to a nationwide rate of 15.5 percent. Only the South had a higher rate. The West was the only region of the country to see a statistical change, up .5 points from 2007. 

New Mexico has the country’s second-highest uninsured rate, just behind Texas, with 23 percent. That’s nearly one in four residents without health insurance. Arizona and Nevada fall in the top 10, too. All eight intermountain states – Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Nevada and Idaho – rank in the top half of uninsured rates. All the top 25 states are in the South, West, West Coast and Alaska.

“Our rates of uninsurance are currently high and I think it’s principally because of the types of businesses we have,” says David Adamson, executive director of Mountain Family Health Center, in Glenwood Springs, which specializes in serving the uninsured.

Many here worked in the shops, mansions and construction sites of nearby Aspen, or in what was a once-thriving natural gas industry. Those industries often don’t provide insurance, Adamson says.

The congressional district that includes Glenwood and Aspen has the highest uninsured rate in the state behind only urban Denver. The vast district includes some of Colorado’s wealthiest and poorest counties. Aspen’s Pitkin County boasts the state’s highest per capita income. Saguache County has the second lowest.

“We have a high proportion of sole proprietors and small businesses,” says Colorado state demographer Elizabeth Garner. “Small businesses tend to have more of a challenge providing health care coverage, especially with the increased cost of health care coverage. Too, health care coverage tends to follow income. The lower income you are, the more likely you are working in retail, which is less likely to be providing health insurance.”

Angus was working at a trendy Aspen eatery, but it wouldn’t provide health insurance until he had worked there for a year. He also worked as a caretaker for a multi-million-dollar Aspen home, but that job didn’t provide insurance either. He had private insurance until about four years ago, he says, when his monthly bills neared $500.

After his blood infection, Angus says, he earned too much to qualify for indigent care but not enough to pay his massive hospital bills.

“They want $2,000 a month for the rest of my life,” he says. “There’s just no way.”

Demographics also add to the West’s rate of uninsured. Hispanics have the highest uninsured rate, at 32.1 percent, or nearly one in every three. American Indians have an uninsured rate of 31.7 percent. Non-Hispanic whites, by comparison, have the lowest rate, at 10.4 percent.

Rates are even higher among immigrants, who are about 2.5 times less likely to have health insurance than the native-born population. Non-citizens have an uninsured rate of 44.7 percent. That’s about 9.5 million immigrants without insurance.

For Angus, the financial burden he’s been left with has become overwhelming.

“Sometimes you think it’s not worth being alive anymore,” he says. “It’s never-ending.”



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