10.15.2005
From the Massachusetts Nurse Newsletter
October 2005 Edition
According to a recent study by the nonpartisan Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), union members are much more likely to have employment-based health insurance than nonunion workers, but the erosion of union membership is likely to coincide with an overall decline in the percentage of workers with health benefits.
The study reported that 86 percent of union members were covered by health benefits through their job, compared with 60 percent of nonunion workers, as of September 2003 (the most recent data available). Union workers in several private-sector fields had very high levels of health insurance coverage, as did union workers in public-sector jobs, the study said. For example:
"Hence, unionization appears to increase the probability of having health benefits in the public sector by 26 percent," said Dallas Salisbury, EBRI president.
Union membership also had a major impact on the probability of workers in small firms having health care benefits, the study said. Eighty-two percent of union members in firms with fewer than 25 employees had employment-based health benefits, compared with 36 percent of nonunion workers in firms of the same size.
Overall, only 2.5 percent of union workers were uninsured in September 2003, compared with 15 percent of nonunion workers. "Union workers across the board are more likely to have health benefits than nonunion workers," the study concluded. "All else being equal, if unionization in the United States continues to decline, the percentage of workers with health benefits will continue to decrease and the percentage of workers who are uninsured will continue to increase."