Katherine Hempstead is a Senior Policy Adviser at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, where she focuses on federal and state policy as it pertains to health insurance coverage, health care costs, and access to care. She publishes on health policy topics and also in areas of demography, particularly mortality. Before coming to the foundation, she worked in state government and held posts in academia.
This is a persistently interesting, invaluable contribution that doesn't just illuminate the history of the private insurance business in the United States. It also puts the development of government regulation and social insurance into a fresh perspective. * Paul Starr, Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs and Stuart Professor of Communications and Public Affairs, Princeton University, and author of The Social Transformation of American Medicine * Uncovered offers an accessible introduction to the history of life, health, and property casualty insurance in the United States, from the end of the Civil War to the present. Hempstead's detailed treatment of the regulatory structures that govern the industry makes this book a valuable contribution to the history of insurance-and a useful guide for those who seek change in the future. * Caley D. Horan, Assistant Professor of History, MIT, and author of The Insurance Era * Uncovered masterfully charts the history and consequences of middle-class America's embrace of private insurance, and of the insurance industry's successful efforts to avoid federal regulation. Told with compelling narrative and verve, Hempstead's story illuminates the patchwork of insurance products and state-based regulation that leaves too many people uncovered. * Tom Baker, William Maul Measey Professor of Law, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School * Most of us only worry about insurance after a calamity * a car accident, flood or fire, illness or death in the family. Kathy Hempstead's book is a powerful and fascinating account of how state and federal regulators have struggled over the last 150 years to ensure that insurance products help consumers recover from their mishaps rather than make things worse. Her well-chosen stories about policyholder loss, combined with revealing profiles of industry leaders (and more than a few charlatans), highlight the successes and expose the failures of insurance regulators in channeling industry ingenuity toward serving the public interest.Joel Ario, Former insurance commissioner in Pennsylvania and Oregon * Insurance plays a vital part in the lives of most people, but until now the story of how the American insurance system evolved has remained largely untold. In Uncovered, Katherine Hempstead has performed a great service by telling that history and tracing the central tensions that have shaped it * tensions between individual responsibility and efforts to socialize the costs of misfortune, between private and public insurance, and between federal and state regulation of the insurance industry. Hempstead ably combines lucid explanation of the technical aspects of insurance history with vivid examples of how its shifting currents have impacted everyday Americans. Her book is essential reading for anyone interested in how the modern world of American insurance came to be.Joseph A. Ranney, Adjunct Professor and Schoone Fellow, Marquette Law School *