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Supplementary Table 2
Working Families Take Up of Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance
Note: This table shows that the percent of people in working families who enrolled in, or "took up." employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) offered to them did not change from 1996-97 to 2000-01. The poeple who were least likely to take up ESI in 2000-01 included those people with family income below the federal povery level, Blacks and Hispanics, people in fair or poor health, people who work for or who have a family member who works for an employer with less than 100 employees, people in families with only part-time workers, and people in one-parent families.
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Percent Who Took Up Employer Sponsored Insurance |
1996-97 |
1998-99 |
2000-01 |
All Nonelderly (Age<65) People in Working Families1 |
90.1 |
90.1 |
90.0 |
Family Income |
Below poverty |
63.3 |
58.5 |
56.4 |
100-199% of poverty |
81.8 |
78.6* |
79.3 |
200% of poverty and above |
94.1 |
94.5 |
93.8* |
Race/Ethnicity |
White |
92.2 |
92.5 |
92.6 |
Black |
82.8 |
85.0 |
82.1* |
Hispanic |
80.7 |
79.4 |
79.3 |
Other |
90.0 |
88.8 |
91.1 |
Health Status |
Excellent, very good or good |
90.7 |
90.8 |
90.9 |
Fair or poor |
82.0 |
81.0 |
79.4 # |
Family-level Firm Size |
Someone in the family works for an employer with less than 10 employees |
84.8 |
85.3 |
81.2 |
Someone in the family works for an employer with 10-99 employees |
82.7 |
82.4 |
82.0 |
Someone in the family works for an employer with 100 or more employees |
91.8 |
91.9 |
92.1 |
Family-level Work Status |
Someone in the family is a full-time worker |
90.7 |
90.6 |
90.6 |
All working family members are part-time workers |
72.3 |
75.1 |
72.2 |
Family Composition |
Single Person |
88.2 |
89.2 |
88.4 |
Married couple without kids |
92.9 |
92.6 |
93.0 |
One parent with kids |
80.3 |
79.4 |
79.0 |
Married couple with kids |
91.3 |
91.6 |
91.5 |
Region |
Northeast |
92.3 |
93.1 |
92.5 |
Midwest |
92.1 |
92.1 |
92.7 |
South |
87.7 |
87.6 |
87.3 |
West |
89.7 |
89.4 |
89.0 |
DATA SOURCE: HSC Community Tracking Study Household Survey.
1A working family is defined as one in which the total number of hours worked by all adult members of a family is 20 or more per week. Families in which all adult members are self-employed without paid employees as well as people who obtain health insurance form someone outside the family are excluded.
* Change from previous round is statistically significant at p<.05.
# Change from 1996-97 to 2000-01 is statistically significant at p<.05.
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