Image for Just Don't Get Sick : Access to Health Care in the Aftermath of Welfare Reform

Just Don't Get Sick : Access to Health Care in the Aftermath of Welfare Reform

Part of the Critical Issues in Health and Medicine Series series
See all formats and editions

The ability to obtain health care is fundamental to the security, stability, and well-being of poor families.

Government-sponsored programs provide temporary support, but as families leave welfare for work, they find themselves without access to coverage or care.

The low-wage jobs that individuals in transition are typically able to secure provide few benefits yet often disqualify employees from receiving federal aid.

Drawing upon statistical data and in-depth interviews with over five hundred families in Oregon, Karen Seccombe and Kim A.

Hoffman assess the ways in which welfare reform affects the well-being of adults and children who leave the program for work.

We hear of asthmatic children whose uninsured but working mothers cannot obtain the preventive medicines to keep them well, and stories of pregnant women receiving little or no prenatal care who end up in emergency rooms with life-threatening conditions.

Representative of poor communities nationwide, the vivid stories recounted here illuminate the critical relationship between health insurance coverage and the ability to transition from welfare to work.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Rutgers University Press
0813540909 / 9780813540900
Hardback
362.1
15/10/2007
United States
English
224 pages, 3 figures, 19 tables
152 x 229 mm
Undergraduate Learn More