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University of Wisconsin–Madison
Poverty-related issues in the news, from the Institute for Research on Poverty

Low-wage Workers and Health Insurance Coverage

  • A common story: Caring for others without health care for oneself, By Sandy Butler and Luisa Deprez, October 25, 2013, Bangor Daily News: “Helen, 45, works seven days a week caring for other people. While she plays an essential role in our health care system as a home care provider for people with chronic health conditions, she herself lacks health insurance. She earns $9.25 an hour and works irregular hours ranging from 20 to 40 each week. Helen, like many other hardworking Maine people, would have been eligible to receive health insurance through MaineCare — what Medicaid is called in Maine — if Gov. Paul LePage had not vetoed the bill to expand Medicaid this past June…”
  • No easy answer for those stuck in low-income jobs, By Hannah Hoffman, October 25, 2013, Statesman Journal: “Kay Cullens opened the apartment door at 9 a.m. on a Monday in September expecting to see Lynn. What she did not expect to see was Lynn lying prone in her brown suede Lazy-Boy recliner, naked save for her oxygen mask and damp underpants. She did not expect to see Lynn’s eyes glazed over and staring at the ceiling. She did not expect to see her own health insurance vanishing with every word Lynn could not quite get out. Cullens, 55, has been a health care worker for 19 years, and for nearly five of those years helped Lynn with her daily needs. She is a member of Oregon’s growing class of low-income workers, a group whose livelihoods are increasingly precarious. With middle-income jobs disappearing, more and more Oregonians are trapped in jobs that barely pay enough to cover bills, and they have no clear path up and out…”