The Future of Work in America: Demise of Employer-Sponsored Insurance and What Should Replace it.
John GeymanPublished in: International journal of health services : planning, administration, evaluation (2021)
The COVID-19 pandemic has wrought fundamental changes in the US workplace, placing employer-sponsored health insurance (ESI) in disarray. Before the pandemic, ESI was the single largest share of private health insurance in the country, including some 150 million Americans. Even before the pandemic, however, ESI had become increasingly volatile and more unaffordable for both employers and employees. During the pandemic, many workers found that they could work at home remotely. Job losses during the pandemic left many millions uninsured, with many jobs lost indefinitely. Today, many Americans are rethinking how and where they want to be involved in the workplace, while many businesses are considering a future when more people are working from home or being replaced by robots, placing ESI in further jeopardy. This article brings historical perspective to these problems, showing how the private health insurance industry has failed the public interest by being too fragmented and unreliable to be afforded or depended upon. Three major reform alternatives are described, only 1 of which-single-payer improved Medicare for All-can provide stable universal coverage that meets the needs of all Americans while being affordable for patients, families, and taxpayers.
Keyphrases
- health insurance
- affordable care act
- ms ms
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- end stage renal disease
- healthcare
- mental health
- current status
- peritoneal dialysis
- emergency department
- prognostic factors
- depressive symptoms
- mass spectrometry
- social support
- health promotion
- gas chromatography
- electronic health record
- drug induced
- long term care