Health and Wellness A-Z
| Private health insurance |
Insurance has been a part of American life since revolutionary times, but it wasn't until the early 1900s that insurance gained wide acceptance as a means of helping people protect themselves from illness and injury.
The need for health insurance emerged in the 1920s, fueled by increasing costs of hospital care. Those costs, driven by significant investments in facilities, equipment and physician training, drove up medical bills for patients and at the same time ballooned the budgets of hospitals, which began exploring funding mechanisms.
Continued prominenceNearly a century later, private health insurance continues to dominate the U.S. health care landscape. Despite attempts by U.S. Presidents, including Harry S. Truman, John F. Kennedy and Bill Clinton, government-sponsored universal health care never materialized. And, although President Lyndon Johnson signed Medicare into law in the 1960s to provide a safety net for citizens over age 65, the majority of 255 million or so Americans under 65 continue to get their health care from private insurers.Employer-sponsored health coverage continues to dominate the ranks of the insured, with approximately 62 percent of non-elderly Americans receiving insurance provided as a benefit of employment. Another 5 percent of the non-elderly group bought coverage outside of the workplace on the individual health insurance market. Access to private health coverageAs mentioned above, the majority of Americans who have insurance obtain it through employer-sponsored or group health insurance plans. The coverage has numerous advantages – among them cost (including the government income tax exemption for health benefits), ease of enrollment, and a wide range of plan options. (In addition to HMO or PPO plan, employees may have the option to purchase insurance for dental, life, short- and long-term disability.)For those who no longer have access to employer-sponsored plans, coverage on the individual market is an option – but one that's not nearly as appealing. Individual coverage tends to cost more, with a smaller range of plan options. In addition, getting individual coverage is typically more difficult than qualifying for than a group plan offered by an employer; policies are individually underwritten, which means that the insurance company will closely scrutinize your complete medical history. The future of private health insuranceRight now, the future of private health insurance is uncertain, though it doesn't appear to be in danger of decreasing in influence any time soon. Congressional legislation that would reform the health care system include proposals for national health insurance exchange that would include a public option to compete with private health insurers. Advocates of the public option – including President Obama – promise that a public option would compete with private health insurance, thus driving down premium costs, standardizing benefits and increasing consumer protections. |

The need for health insurance emerged in the 1920s, fueled by increasing costs of hospital care. Those costs, driven by significant investments in facilities, equipment and physician training, drove up medical bills for patients and at the same time ballooned the budgets of hospitals, which began exploring funding mechanisms.