From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject Racial And Ethnic Disparities In Pandemic-Era Unemployment Insurance Access
Date November 28, 2022 9:10 PM
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Forefront: Medicaid can play a role in preventing intimate partner
violence
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Monday, November 28, 2022 | The Latest Research, Commentary, And News
From Health Affairs

Dear John,

Join us on Thursday, December 8, 2022, for a free virtual briefing
<[link removed]>
on the topic, "The Health and Policy Implications of Building Income
Supports for Low-Income Families with Young Children." Featured speakers
will include authors from our upcoming issue on equitable social
supports and more.

Unemployment Insurance Access

In their November 2022 article, Elizabeth Ananat and coauthors use
survey data from hourly workers in the retail, food service, and hotel
sectors in Philadelphia to investigate racial and ethnic disparities in
pandemic-era unemployment insurance access
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Ananat and coauthors find that Black and Hispanic workers are just as
likely as White workers to experience material and mental hardship when
laid off and to have that hardship relieved if they receive unemployment
insurance (UI) benefits.

However, Black and Hispanic workers are less likely to receive UI, but
increasing access to the program could help reduce the disparate effects
of job loss on non-White workers and related racial health disparities.

Ananat and coauthors recommend several policies to improve unemployment
insurance and reduce race and ethnicity gaps, including permanently
extending coverage to lower-earning workers and reforming financing.

Read the entire collection of articles exploring the health effects of
economic security policies in the November issue of Health Affairs
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Read More
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Elsewhere At Health Affairs

Today on Forefront, Debbie Chang and Paul Decker discuss how examples
from California, North Carolina, and universal education in health care
provide guidance for other states to study and address intimate partner
violence as an integrated part of Medicaid services
<[link removed]>.

Amanda Zink and coauthors write about the relationship of trust between
physicians and their patients
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and how prioritizing trust is a key aspect to establishing safety in a
health care setting.

Enjoying Forefront <[link removed]> articles?
Bookmark our website to never miss an update.

Daily Digest

Racial And Ethnic Disparities In Pandemic-Era Unemployment Insurance
Access: Implications For Health And Well-Being
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Elizabeth Oltmans Ananat et al.

Medicaid Can Play A Role In Preventing Intimate Partner Violence
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Debbie I. Chang and Paul Decker

The Overlooked Role Of Physician Trust In Patients
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Amanda Zink et al.

 

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About Health Affairs

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