健康冲击对就业和健康保险的影响:雇主提供的健康保险的作用。

Cathy J Bradley, David Neumark, Meryl Motika
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引用次数: 37

摘要

就业条件健康保险(ECHI)因将保险与持续就业挂钩而受到批评。我们的研究揭示了与就业相关的健康保险有关的两个核心问题:这种保险是否“锁定”了经历健康冲击的人继续工作;以及它是否会使人们在发病时面临保险损失的风险,因为健康冲击对持续就业构成了挑战。我们研究了男性对自己雇主的健康保险依赖如何影响健康冲击后的劳动力供应反应和健康保险覆盖范围。我们使用健康与退休研究(HRS)从1996年到2008年的调查,观察每隔2年的访谈中的就业和健康保险状况,以及在访谈之间是否发生了健康冲击。所有通过自己的雇主或配偶的雇主获得医疗保险的已婚就业男性,至少连续两次接受HRS采访,在就业、保险、健康、人口统计和其他变量方面没有缺失数据,第二次采访时年龄在64岁以下,都包括在研究样本中。然后,我们将样本限制在最初健康的男性身上。我们的分析样本包括1,582名男性,其中1,379名在第一次采访时患有ECHI,而203名由其配偶的雇主覆盖。住院治疗影响了209名有ECHI的男性和36名有配偶保险的男性。103名有ECHI的男性和22名有其他保险的男性报告了新的疾病诊断。有171名有健康保险的男性和25名有配偶雇主保险的男性自我报告健康状况下降。与ECHI相关的劳动力供给反应差异——有健康冲击的男性和有健康冲击的男性更有可能继续工作——似乎是由特定类型的健康冲击驱动的,这些健康冲击与未来更高的医疗保健成本有关,而不是与限制继续就业的发病率的立即增加有关。与通过配偶获得医疗保险的男性相比,自我报告健康状况下降的患有先天性心脏病的男性更有可能失去医疗保险。随着卫生保健改革的通过,与其他保险来源相比,拥有职业健康保险的男子在遭受健康冲击后继续就业的趋势可能会减少,同时失去健康保险的可能性也会减少。
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The effects of health shocks on employment and health insurance: the role of employer-provided health insurance.

Employment-contingent health insurance (ECHI) has been criticized for tying insurance to continued employment. Our research sheds light on two central issues regarding employment-contingent health insurance: whether such insurance "locks" people who experience a health shock into remaining at work; and whether it puts people at risk for insurance loss upon the onset of illness, because health shocks pose challenges to continued employment. We study how men's dependence on their own employer for health insurance affects labor supply responses and health insurance coverage following a health shock. We use the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) surveys from 1996 through 2008 to observe employment and health insurance status at interviews 2 years apart, and whether a health shock occurred in the intervening period between the interviews. All employed married men with health insurance either through their own employer or their spouse's employer, interviewed in at least two consecutive HRS waves with non-missing data on employment, insurance, health, demographic, and other variables, and under age 64 at the second interview are included in the study sample. We then limited the sample to men who were initially healthy. Our analytical sample consisted of 1,582 men of whom 1,379 had ECHI at the first interview, while 203 were covered by their spouse's employer. Hospitalization affected 209 men with ECHI and 36 men with spouse insurance. A new disease diagnosis was reported by 103 men with ECHI and 22 men with other insurance. There were 171 men with ECHI and 25 men with spouse employer insurance who had a self-reported health decline. Labor supply response differences associated with ECHI-with men with health shocks and ECHI more likely to continue working-appear to be driven by specific types of health shocks associated with future higher health care costs but not with immediate increases in morbidity that limit continued employment. Men with ECHI who have a self-reported health decline are significantly more likely to lose health insurance than men with insurance through a spouse. With the passage of health care reform, the tendency of men with ECHI as opposed to other sources of insurance to remain employed following a health shock may be diminished, along with the likelihood of losing health insurance.

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