Groundbreaking Report Finds Serious Illness and Affordability of Health Care a Growing Problem for Working-Class Women of All Races, Ethnicities, and Geographies
Among the leading findings:
* Compared to college-educated men, working-class women are 3.5 times as likely to report 14 or more days of poor health during the month. Nearly 1 in 5 working-class women (19 percent) experiences poor mental health for at least two weeks out of the month, compared to just 1 in 18 college-educated men (6 percent).
* Working-class women are more than three times as likely to go without doctor visits because of cost as are college-educated men. More than 1 in 4 working-class women (28 percent) are denied care because they cannot afford it, compared to fewer than 1 in 12 (8 percent) college-educated men.
* The crisis in working-class women's health affects families of all ethnicities. For both whites and African-Americans, poor physical health is three times as likely for working-class women as for college-educated men in the same racial group. Among Latinos, serious physical health problems are more than twice as likely for working-class women as for college-educated men.
"These disparities are shocking, and their import is clear," said
"This report makes it crystal clear that the needs of women should be front and center in our national and state health policy," said
The report also found that, with certain critical public health problems, the effects of race and ethnicity can overwhelm the role played by class. For example, asthma rates among the children of college-educated African-Americans are more than a third higher than for children of white parents who have a high school education or less.
"People in our nation, from every background and from every geographic area, have much in common when it comes to their health status and access to affordable care. And while the current system is performing poorly for people in many demographic groups, we now know that working-class women experience particularly serious challenges," said
These longstanding downward trends reversed direction in 2014 when the Affordable Care Act (ACA) went into effect. Serious physical and mental health problems started becoming less common for both working-class families and people of color, and disparities between working-class women and college-educated men began to narrow, in every racial and ethnic group.
"We've long known that racism and sexism have a harmful effect on the health care women receive. This report broadens that view and shows that similar issues are faced by working-class women of all races and ethnicities," says
Isasi concluded, "One of the report's most basic lessons is that bold public policy, like the ACA, can help millions of everyday people overcome important problems of daily life. Now is the time for a new round of bold leadership and action to take seriously the task to improve vulnerable people's lives, not just the working-class women who have been left out, but everyone who has been left behind, or whose health and health care has been taken for granted by our nation's leaders for far too long."
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