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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Study sees ‘health gap’

Compiled from staff and wire reports The Spokesman-Review

Boise More and more people in the Northwest are falling into a widening “health gap” of those who either lack health insurance or are underinsured, according to a study released Thursday by the Northwest Federation of Community Organizations.

The federation looked at Idaho, Washington, Oregon and Montana, and concluded that lawmakers in all four states should increase efforts to expand public insurance programs, improve oversight of private insurance, and work on ways to prevent more employers from dropping health coverage. The gap the study identified falls between the poorest people who qualify for full government health coverage, and those at the other end of the spectrum, whose coverage is comprehensive. It includes those with no insurance, and those who either purchase their own insurance or get it from their jobs, but with more out-of-pocket costs than they can cover.

“People may be in the health gap without realizing it,” said Osulei Knudson of the Idaho Community Action Agency, a member group of the federation. “People with health insurance often don’t realize that they’re underinsured – until deductibles and cost sharing eat up their savings and even force them into bankruptcy.”

The study found that the gap is widening because fewer employers offer comprehensive health benefits; premiums, co-pays, and other out-of-pocket costs are rising; and more people are working for small employers who are less able to offer health coverage.

The entire four-state study is posted on the Internet at www.nwfco.org/2005-0616 _health_gap.pdf.

Three hospitalized in I-90 crashes

Three people were hospitalized after their vehicles rolled on Interstate 90 in two separate crashes late Wednesday and early Thursday, the Washington State Patrol reported.

The most serious injuries occurred when two people were ejected from a westbound Chevrolet station wagon that rolled about 5:50 a.m. Thursday on Interstate 90 near Fishtrap. The car rolled after it had left the roadway and the driver overcorrected, WSP said.

Two passengers in the car, Robert Epperson, 32, and Miranda Zitting, 22, were taken by helicopter to Sacred Heart Medical Center. Epperson, of Lake Stevens, Wash., and Zitting, of Spokane, were listed in critical condition Thursday afternoon.

WSP was not certain which occupant was driving or if either was wearing a seat belt. The crash remains under investigation.

About eight hours earlier, an eastbound Ford Expedition rolled when the driver swerved to avoid a deer Wednesday evening near the state Highway 904 exit near the western border of Spokane County.

Four people from Naches, Wash., in the SUV were taken by ambulance to Sacred Heart Medical Center. They were the driver, David Barrett, 52, and passengers Susan Barrett, 52; Benjamin Barrett, 16; and Katie Barrett, 12.

Katie Barrett was listed in serious condition at the hospital Thursday afternoon. Susan and Benjamin were treated and released, and David was not treated, a hospital spokesman said.

All of the Barretts were wearing seat belts at the time of the crash, WSP said.

Idaho schools get water grants

Three Idaho universities have been jointly awarded a $9 million federal grant to study the state’s creeks and snowpacks, and establish a statewide network of water research, the University of Idaho announced Wednesday.

The UI, along with Boise State and Idaho State universities, will use the three-year grant to gather data in Idaho watersheds and to research nitrogen and carbon cycles, stream ecology and fish genetics. The funding will also allow the creation of a statewide network of water research information and create a state water quality laboratory, according to the UI. As part of the research, the UI will study Mica Creek in North Idaho, ISU will monitor the Portneuf River in southeastern Idaho, and BSU will study Dry Creek in the southwest part of the state.

Students and teachers in school districts near each experimental watershed will help collect information and use it in the classroom, the UI said.

Toolbox prompts ferry shutdown

Seattle The Washington state ferry Tacoma was taken out of service for more than 2 1/2 hours Thursday evening while a “suspicious box” was checked out.

It turned out to be a toolbox, Washington State Ferries spokeswoman Susan Harris said.

The ferry, which serves the busy Seattle-to-Bainbridge Island run, missed two round trips after the ferry crew reported the mystery box at one end of the boat’s passenger cabin.