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The Health-Care Gender Gap
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New research reveals many fast-growing professions for women lack health insurance. Dana Goldstein on why reform proposals stiff “pink-collar” workers.
It was sold as the silver lining of the recession: With the national unemployment rate inching toward 10 percent—and the bloodletting especially severe in testosterone-fueled industries like finance and manufacturing—women were supposedly doing dandy. Federal stimulus dollars protected typically female jobs in nursing and teaching. The New York Times trumpeted that laid-off dads were picking up more chores around the house while “opt-out” moms headed back to the office, saving their families from financial destitution. For the first time in American history, women accounted for 49 percent of the labor force. Within the next few weeks, it is likely that more than half of all workers will have two X chromosomes, a milestone that would have been unimaginable to previous generations.
It’s true that men account for four-fifths of all layoffs since the downturn began nearly two years ago. But scratch the statistical surface and you’ll find that American women are hardly sailing through the economic storm. A new report by California's first lady, Maria Shriver, and the Washington-based Center for American Progress contains some encouraging news on shifting attitudes about gender. It finds that both men and women are enthusiastic about increased gender diversity in the workplace, and men are taking on more responsibility at home. But it also finds that most American women remain mired in unstable jobs with few employee benefits.
The Baucus bill slams single moms in the midst of a recession, when many are scrounging to make ends meet.
With the exception of nursing, the fastest-growing professions for women workers—retail sales, customer service, food service, and home health aides—are not only poorly paid with irregular hours, but also typically lack health-insurance coverage. That’s why women are more than twice as likely as men to depend on a spouse for insurance; only 38 percent of women receive coverage through their own job, compared to 50 percent of men. Yet the number of female-headed households, in which women and children don’t have the option of relying on a man for benefits, is growing. Forty percent of all American births are to unmarried moms, and 30 percent of all U.S. households are headed by a single woman. Do the reform proposals kicking around Congress do enough to provide stability to these “pink-collar” workers and their families?
In the past month, the White House has certainly emphasized reform’s benefits for the fairer sex, focusing on insurance company discrimination against women who’ve had C-sections or who have been the victims of domestic violence. In a Sept. 18 speech on the topic, Michelle Obama hit insurers hard. “In many states, insurance companies can still discriminate because of gender,” she intoned. “And this is still shocking to me. These are the kind of facts that still wake me up at night.” Female senators echoed the message in congressional hearings and on the floor. When Jon Kyl (R-AZ) opposed a minimum benefits package, using the excuse, “I don’t need maternity care,” the feisty Debbie Stabenow (D-MI.) snapped back, “I think your mom probably did.”
The reform plans kicking around Congress would represent some real improvement for women, forcing insurance companies to cover pre-natal care and ending the practice of “gender rating,” in which women are charged more than double what men pay for the same insurance. (Insurers’ excuse for the discrimination? Women use more health-care services.)
But some of the threats to women’s health are coming from Washington itself. The chief culprit is buried in Sen. Max Baucus’ Senate Finance Committee bill, which is more moderate than the House and Senate HELP Committee drafts, and largely viewed as the blueprint upon which the final legislation will be built. To woo Maine’s Olympia Snowe, the only Republican so far to vote in favor of health reform, Baucus’ draft is the only plan without an employer mandate, or requirement that companies provide health benefits. Instead, Baucus forces companies to reimburse the federal government for a percentage of the health-care costs of uninsured workers and their dependents—because after the overhaul, those without employer-provided coverage will be eligible for affordability subsidies.









The entire workforce contains an X-chromosome no matter what. What is meant is that less than half the workforce will contain a Y-chromosome
Right, but the author says "it is likely that more than half of all workers will have two X chromosomes." The entire workforce better not all have two X chromosomes, cause that would be bad for business.
Women hold up half this guy.
michaelslevinson.com
It's always such a moral-booster when you go in to talk to your director about compensation, and they tell you that your raise was "sacrificed" to some mouth-breather (male in this case) because he has to support his wife (who, by the way, works). It didn't even enter into his mind that I could be (and was) supporting an out-of-work husband at home...when I explained this to him, he looked honestly puzzled and flummoxed that a woman could be supporting a man. Attitudes are slow to change. To his great credit, I got a decent adjustment 1/2 way through the year, but the founding principals for the original decision were outdated claptrap and I still frequently run into this attitude and I live in an almost exclusively liberal city.
Bravo Dana. Excellent article. Thanks for putting into words all that is floating around us. Keep up the great work!
Great. Now PLEASE publish the names of the thirty (30) republican senators that voted against Senator Franken's anti-rape amendment.
Thank you.
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