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Study: Health Insurance Major Concern for Farmers Writer: Martha Filipic Source: Shoshanah Inwood, Social Responsibility Initiative COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Both large and small farmers say that the cost of health insurance is their top business concern, according to a new report issued by Ohio State University's Social Responsibility Initiative (SRI). The findings come from a larger study, "Agricultural Adaptation at the Rural-Urban Interface: Can Communities Make a Difference?" led by researchers at Ohio State and Utah State University. The goal of the ongoing national study is to identify the challenges and opportunities of farming in urbanizing areas. "Health insurance came up several times in interviews with farmers before we conducted our survey in 2007, so we decided to include health insurance as an issue in the survey," said Shoshanah Inwood, an SRI research associate in Ohio State's College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences. "But we were not expecting it to come out as the top concern. We were really surprised." However, a 2009 study from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Economic Research Service, "Health Care Access of Farm and Rural Populations," supports the survey findings, Inwood said. The USDA study found that farm operator households spend more on health care than other U.S. households, spending an average of $5,200 to $10,000 a year for health insurance coverage. In Inwood's study, researchers analyzed surveys from 453 farmers from eight counties in six states. All operate in areas known as the "Rural-Urban Interface" -- rural land situated near increasingly urbanized areas. Key findings of the research include:
The researchers conclude, Inwood said, that when policy-makers at the local, state or national levels design local land protection and agricultural economic development policies, they should account for the issue of health insurance and how it impacts farm persistence and adaptation. Inwood is pleased that the findings of the study are available just as interest in national health care policies is at a peak. "An affordable and accessible national health care program would free up time and resources for farmers at the rural-urban interface and elsewhere," Inwood said. "It would allow them to more easily reinvest in their enterprises, households and local economies." The full report is available online at http://cffpi.osu.edu/policybriefs.htm. Additional information on the national study is available at http://cffpi.osu.edu/agadapt.htm. |
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