The Economic Recession - Early Impacts on Health Care Safety Net Providers

Source: Laurie E. Felland, Peter J. Cunningham, Genna R. Cohen, Elizabeth A. November
and Brian C. Quinn, Center for Studying Health System Change, Issue Brief, no. 15, January 2010

From a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation summary:
The recession has significantly increased demands on the health care safety net as millions of people have lost jobs and health insurance, but in some cases the impact on safety net providers has been less severe than expected. That's according to a new Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) study of five communities--Cleveland; Greenville, S.C.; northern New Jersey; Phoenix; and Seattle.

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation-funded study looks at how federal stimulus funding, among other factors, has helped safety net providers weather the economic storm, partially offsetting reductions in state, local and private funding. But while safety net providers have stayed financially viable so far, the authors suggest that the safety net in these communities may have not yet felt the full weight of the recession. Unemployment and uninsured rates will likely remain high for some time, and demands on safety net providers could persist as stimulus funding ends.

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Union Strategies for Hard Times
by Bill Barry



What can unions do as the Great Recession ravages workers and their unions and threatens to destroy decades of collective bargaining gains? What must local union leaders do to help their laid-off members, protect those still working, and prevent the gutting of their hard-fought contracts – and their very unions themselves? How, in fact, can local union leaders seize the time and turn crisis into opportunity?



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