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For Middle Class, Health Insurance Becomes a Luxury

November 16, 2003
 By STEPHANIE STROM 



 

DALLAS - The last time Kevin Thornton had health insurance
was three years ago, which was not much of a problem until
he began having trouble swallowing. 

"I broke down earlier this year and went in and talked to a
doctor about it," said Mr. Thornton, who lives in Sherman,
about 60 miles north of Dallas. 

A barium X-ray cost him $130, and the radiologist another
$70, expenses he charged to his credit cards. The doctor
ordered other tests that Mr. Thornton simply could not
afford. 

"I was supposed to go back after the X-ray results came,
but I decided just to live with it for a while," he said.
"I may just be a walking time bomb." 

Mr. Thornton, 41, left a stable job with good health
coverage in 1998 for a higher salary at a dot-com company
that went bust a few months later. Since then, he has
worked on contract for various companies, including one
that provided insurance until the project ended in 2000. "I
failed to keep up the payments that would have been
required to maintain my coverage," he said. "It was just
too much money." 

Mr. Thornton is one of more than 43 million people in the
United States who lack health insurance, and their numbers
are rapidly increasing because of ever soaring cost and job
losses. Many states, including Texas, are also cutting back
on subsidies for health care, further increasing the number
of people with no coverage. 

The majority of the uninsured are neither poor by official
standards nor unemployed. They are accountants like Mr.
Thornton, employees of small businesses, civil servants,
single working mothers and those working part time or on
contract. 

"Now it's hitting people who look like you and me, dress
like you and me, drive nice cars and live in nice houses
but can't afford $1,000 a month for health insurance for
their families," said R. King Hillier, director of
legislative relations for Harris County, which includes
Houston. 

Paying for health insurance is becoming a middle-class
problem, and not just here. "After paying for health
insurance, you take home less than minimum wage," says a
poster in New York City subways sponsored by Working Today,
a nonprofit agency that offers health insurance to
independent contractors in New York. "Welcome to
middle-class poverty." In Southern California, 70,000
supermarket workers have been on strike for five weeks over
plans to cut their health benefits. 

The insurance crisis is especially visible in Texas, which
has the highest proportion of uninsured in the country -
almost one in every four residents. The state has a large
population of immigrants; its labor market is dominated by
low-wage service sector jobs, and it has a higher than
average number of small businesses, which are less likely
to provide health benefits because they pay higher
insurance costs than large companies. 

State cuts to subsidies for health insurance to help close
a $10 billion budget gap will cost the state $500 million
in federal matching money and are expected to further spur
the rise in uninsured. In September, for example, more than
half a million children enrolled in a state- and
federal-subsidized insurance program lost dental, vision
and most mental care coverage, and some 169,000 children
will lose all insurance by 2005. 

"These were tough economic times that the legislature was
dealing with, and the governor believed in setting the tone
for the legislative session that the government must
operate the way Texas families do and Texas businesses do
and live within its means," said Kathy Walt, spokeswoman
for Gov. Rick Perry. 

She noted that the legislature raised spending on health
and human services by $1 billion this year, and that
lawmakers passed two bills intended to make it easier for
small businesses to provide health insurance for their
employees. 

Those measures, however, will not help Theresa Pardo or
other Texas residents like her who have to make tough
choices about medical care they need but cannot afford. 

Ms. Pardo, a 29-year-old from Houston, said that having no
insurance meant choosing between buying an inhaler for her
9-year-old asthmatic daughter or buying her a birthday
present. The girl, Morgan, lost her state-subsidized
insurance last month, and now her mother must pay $80
instead of $5 for the inhaler. 

Rent, car payments and insurance, day care and utilities
cost Ms. Pardo more than $1,200 a month, leaving less than
$200 for food, gas and other expenses. So even though her
employer, the Harris County government, provides her with
low-cost insurance, she cannot afford the $275 a month she
would have to pay to add her daughter to her plan. 

When Morgan's dentist recently wanted to pull a tooth, Ms.
Pardo hesitated. The tooth extraction proceeded, but: "I
had to ask him, if you pull this tooth, will it cause other
problems? Because if it does, I can't afford to deal with
them." 

Lorenda Stevenson said her choice was between buying
medicine to treat patches of peeling, flaking skin on her
hands, arms and face and making sure her son could continue
his after-school tennis program. "There's no way I will cut
that out unless we don't have money for food," she said. 

Mrs. Stevenson's husband, Bill, lost his management job at
WorldCom two years ago, when an accounting scandal forced
the company into bankruptcy. They managed to pay $900 a
month for Cobra, the government policy that allows workers
to continue their coverage after they lose their jobs, but
when the cost rose to $1,200, they could no longer afford
it. 

When their son, a ninth grader, needed a physical and shot
to take tennis, Mrs. Stevenson turned to the Rockwall Area
Health Clinic, a nonprofit clinic in Rockwall, a city of
13,000 northeast of Dallas. The clinic charged her $20
instead of the $400 she estimated she would have paid at
the doctor's office. 

"I sat filling out the paperwork and crying," she said,
tears streaming down her face. "I was so embarrassed to
bring him here." 

A salve to treat her skin condition costs $27, and she pays
roughly $50 a month for medications for high blood pressure
and hormones. She does without medication she needs for
acid reflux, treating the conditions sporadically with
samples from the clinic. 

Carol Johnston cannot afford even doctor visits. A single
mother in Houston, she lost her job in health care
administration in May and said she was still unemployed
despite filling out 500 to 600 applications and attending
countless job fairs. 

Cobra would have cost $214 a month, or more than one-fifth
of the $1,028 in unemployment she gets a month. As it is,
her monthly bills for rent, car, utilities and phone exceed
her income. 

She got a 12-month deferral on her student loans, and Ford
pushed her car payments back by two months. The Johnstons
rely on television for entertainment and almost never use
air-conditioning, despite Houston's muggy, hot climate. 

Now Ms. Johnston's 16-year-old son is losing the portion of
his insurance that covered treatment for his learning and
emotional disabilities because of state cutbacks. 

Ms. Johnston herself does not qualify for Medicaid, the
government insurance program for the indigent, because her
income is too high, the same reason she qualifies for only
$10 a month in food stamps. "I worry, I worry so much about
making sure my son is safe," she said. 

As for her own health, Ms. Johnston has two cysts in one
breast and three in another but has had only one aspirated
because she cannot afford to check on the others. "Do I
have to move to Iraq to get help?" she asked. "They have
$87 billion for folks over there," she said, referring to
money Congress allocated for military operations and
rebuilding. 

Experts warn that allowing health problems to fester is
only going to increase the costs of health care for the
uninsured. "As Americans, when are we going to realize it's
cheaper to save them on the front end than when they get
cancer and show up in the emergency room?" said Sandra B.
Thurman, executive director of PediPlace, a nonprofit
health clinic in Lewisville, Tex. 

Many hospitals and neighborhood clinics here say that the
well-heeled are now joining the poor in seeking their care.
Emergency rooms are particularly hard hit, since federal
law requires them to treat anyone who walks through their
doors for emergency treatment, regardless of whether they
can pay. 

Public hospital emergency rooms are even harder hit, since
private hospitals will move quickly to shift uninsured
patients to them. And clinics for the poor are also seeing
an increase in demand. 

A clinic run by Central Dallas Ministries charges patients
$5 for a doctor visit, $10 for medication and $15 if
laboratory work is needed, but often settles for no payment
from many of the 3,500 patients it treats each year. 

"I'm not real optimistic it will get a lot better," said
Larry Morris James, executive director of Central Dallas
Ministries. "Demographic and economic trends tell you that
it's probably going to get worse." 

For Irma Arellano, the problem has already hit home. Mrs.
Arellano is a secretary in the Royse school district
northeast of Dallas, which provides her health insurance
for $35 a month but offers no discounts for her three
children or husband. 

Two years ago, the Arellanos paid $269 a month to insure
the family. The price jumped last year to $339 and this
year to $780, more than their monthly mortgage payment. 

Her husband works for a small landscaping company that does
not offer insurance. So Mrs. Arellano is insured, but her
husband, Jose, and their three children - Jackie, 16; Joe,
15; and Anthony, 13 - are going without insurance. 

The Arellanos' income, which ranges from $2,800 to $3,200 a
month, makes them ineligible for state-subsidized
insurance. Their basic expenses run $2,000 a month or more.


"I'm one of those people in the middle," Mrs. Arellano
said. "We don't make enough to pay for insurance ourselves,
but we make too much to qualify for CHIP," the
government-subsidized program for children. 

So her children were recently at the Rockwall clinic for
the physicals they need to participate in after-school
sports, paying $25 instead of the $100 or more Mrs.
Arellano would have paid at the doctor's office. 

The family has catastrophic insurance, but Mrs. Arellano is
uncertain how much longer she can afford it. Mr. Arellano's
income typically drops in the winter, and his wife is
hoping the children will then qualify for the state
insurance program. 

Even so, newly initiated regulations require families to
reapply for the insurance every six months, rather than
once a year, so they are not likely to qualify for long. 

"I'll take what I can get," Mrs. Arellano said.


http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/16/national/16INSU.html?ex=1070015089&ei=1&en=71a5f688d394a03d


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