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Home » Pandemic cost workers their health insurance but the trend is improving

Pandemic cost workers their health insurance but the trend is improving

August 19, 2020
TCAJOB Staff

Washington’s uninsured rate nearly doubled in the first weeks of the Covid-19 pandemic as more than a million workers lost their jobs and their employer-sponsored health coverage. 

A report issued Aug. 19 by the state Office of Financial Management indicates the uninsured rate remained far above pre-pandemic levels, but the numbers are improving locally and across the state.  

Before the pandemic, 6.7% of Washington residents had no health insurance. That jumped to 13% by May 23 as job losses cut many workers and their families off from employer-sponsored health insurance. By the week of Aug. 8, the uninsured rate stood at 8.5%, or 26% above pre-pandemic levels.  

In Benton County, 5.3% of residents lacked health insurance prior to the pandemic. The uninsured rate jumped to 10.6% in May and fell to 6.9% by Aug. 8, or 30% above pre-pandemic levels.  

Benton had the fifth-highest increase in the state after Pierce (41%), King (40%), Snohomish (35%) and Kittitas (32%) counties.

In Franklin County, 15.8% of residents lacked health insurance prior to the pandemic. That rose to 18.1% by May 23, falling back to 16.5% by Aug. 8, or 4.5% higher than pre-pandemic levels.  

Franklin County had a relative low increase because it already had one of the highest uninsured rates before the pandemic, along with Yakima and Adams counties. 

The full report is available at bit.ly/OFMUninsuredReportAugust.

 

 

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