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November 5, 2008    DOL > EBSA > Newsroom > Fact Sheet

General Facts On Women And Job Based Health

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According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the labor force is becoming more diverse, older and more female. Today, those changing labor force demographics are already evident in terms of the increased number of working women.

Working women are likely to be the primary decision maker for the family as well as the care giver when a family member falls ill. Therefore, women need adequate knowledge and tools to satisfy their multiple roles as decision makers and consumers of health care.

Women As Major Health Care Consumers

  • Approximately 81% of women age 18-64 had health insurance in 2005. The remaining 19% -- which translates into 17 million women -- had no health benefit coverage.

  • Fifteen percent of women obtained insurance from public programs, including Medicaid, Medicare, and CHAMPUS. Seventy-one percent had private insurance.

  • Private insurance was obtained mainly through employment-based plans. Sixty-four percent of all women had such coverage, either in their own names or as dependents, 49% through private-sector jobs and 15% through government jobs.

  • Women utilize more health care than men, in part because of their need for reproductive services. Females of all ages accounted for 60% of all expenses incurred at doctors’ offices in 2004.

  • Women make approximately 80 percent of health care decisions for their families and are more likely to be the care givers when a family member falls ill.

Women With Health Insurance In Their Own Names

In 2005 39% of women age 18-64, or 36 million women, had employment-based coverage in their own name. Twenty-five million or 26% had such coverage from a private-sector job.



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