Growing concern about the affordability of health care and the cost burden imposed on working families frequently appears in public debate about the next phase of health care reform. In an earlier brief, Penn LDI and United States of Care reviewed national data on rising health care costs and different ways to measure whether health care and coverage are “affordable.” In this second briefof our affordability series, we adapt one of these measures to provide state-level data on the cost burden faced by working families who have employer-sponsored insurance (ESI). While not all working families have ESI, it is the most common form of health insurance in the United States. We examine how this burden varies across states, and how it has changed...
Employers provide the most common source of health insurance coverage among the nonelderly populatio...
Analyzes state-by-state trends in insurance premium costs and as a share of household income. Compar...
Looking at trends in private employer-based health insurance from 2003 to 2013, this issue brief fin...
Health care spending represents a growing share of our national income, and based on current project...
Although the “affordability” of health care is a common concern, the term is rarely defined. Fundame...
One-quarter of privately insured working-age adults have high health care cost burdens relative to t...
The notion that healthcare costs in the United States are increasingly burdensome for many families ...
During the past 50 years, spending on health care services—by households, private businesses, and st...
In the run-up to the presidential election, the affordability of health care remains a top concern o...
Examines the availability, affordability, and stability of health insurance coverage for middle-inco...
From 2010 to 2013—the years following the implementation of the Affordable Care Act—there has been a...
Examines the percentage of low-income families, by income, family structure, and out-of-pocket healt...
In the health care debate, there are three critical areas that policymakers must consider: adequacy,...
This report focuses on two questions of current interest to policy makers. First, \ue2\u20ac\u153Wha...
Using the Urban Institute's simulation model, estimates household financial burdens under House and ...
Employers provide the most common source of health insurance coverage among the nonelderly populatio...
Analyzes state-by-state trends in insurance premium costs and as a share of household income. Compar...
Looking at trends in private employer-based health insurance from 2003 to 2013, this issue brief fin...
Health care spending represents a growing share of our national income, and based on current project...
Although the “affordability” of health care is a common concern, the term is rarely defined. Fundame...
One-quarter of privately insured working-age adults have high health care cost burdens relative to t...
The notion that healthcare costs in the United States are increasingly burdensome for many families ...
During the past 50 years, spending on health care services—by households, private businesses, and st...
In the run-up to the presidential election, the affordability of health care remains a top concern o...
Examines the availability, affordability, and stability of health insurance coverage for middle-inco...
From 2010 to 2013—the years following the implementation of the Affordable Care Act—there has been a...
Examines the percentage of low-income families, by income, family structure, and out-of-pocket healt...
In the health care debate, there are three critical areas that policymakers must consider: adequacy,...
This report focuses on two questions of current interest to policy makers. First, \ue2\u20ac\u153Wha...
Using the Urban Institute's simulation model, estimates household financial burdens under House and ...
Employers provide the most common source of health insurance coverage among the nonelderly populatio...
Analyzes state-by-state trends in insurance premium costs and as a share of household income. Compar...
Looking at trends in private employer-based health insurance from 2003 to 2013, this issue brief fin...