More People In US Dealing With Financial Burden Of Health Care Costs
Main Category: Health Insurance / Medical InsuranceArticle Date: 16 Dec 2006 - 18:00 PDT
An estimated 50 million people younger than 65 years in the U.S. live in families that spend more than 10 percent of their family income on health care, an increase of more than 10 million people in the past decade, according to a study in the December 13 issue of JAMA.
Health care costs have been rising faster than the rest of the U.S. economy for many years. Out-of-pocket payments for health care services by patients increased from $162 billion in 1997 to $236 billion in 2004, according to background information in the article. Although health care expenditures are consuming a larger share of the U.S. gross domestic product, it is not clear to what extent health care expenditures are also consuming a larger share of family budgets. This information could help policymakers understand the impact of their policies and inform the debate on where to target additional subsidies.
Jessica S. Banthin, Ph.D., and Didem M. Bernard, Ph.D., of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Rockville, Md., examined the net impact of various trends in costs and coverage and changes in benefits on the percentage of family income devoted to insurance and medical care expenditures among the nonelderly population. The researchers analyzed data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Surveys of 1996 and 2003, which are nationally representative samples of U.S. individuals younger than 65 years, to calculate 2 measures of financial burden as a function of tax-adjusted family income. Sample sizes were 19,022 persons in 1996 and 28,970 persons in 2003. Total burden included all out-of-pocket expenditures for health care services, including premiums. Health care services burden excluded premiums and, when applied to the insured population, was used to identify the underinsured, which was defined as insured persons with health care service burdens in excess of 10 percent of tax-adjusted family income.
"We found that the prevalence of high financial burdens increased across the population as a whole and among several subgroups between 1996 and 2003," the authors write. By 2003, there were 48.8 million individuals (19.2 percent of the population) living in families that spent more than 10 percent of family income on medical care, an increase of 11.7 million persons since 1996. Of these individuals, 18.7 million (7.3 percent of the population) lived in families spending more than 20 percent of family income on medical care in 2003.
In 2003, individuals with higher-than-average risk of incurring high total burdens included poor and low-income individuals and those with nongroup coverage, age 55 to 64 years, living in a non-metropolitan statistical area, in fair or poor health, having any type of limitation, or having a chronic medical condition.
"Our measure of health care service burden can be used to identify the underinsured, i.e., insured persons without adequate financial protection from high out-of-pocket costs. By this definition, we estimate that 17.1 million insured persons younger than 65 years were underinsured in 2003, including 9.3 million persons with private employment-related insurance, 1.3 million persons with private nongroup policies, and 6.6 million persons with public coverage," they write.
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(JAMA. 2006;296:2712-2719.)
This study was supported by the AHRQ, as employer of Drs. Banthin and Bernard. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.
Contact: Karen Migdail
JAMA and Archives Journals
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MLA
13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/58894.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/58894.php.
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (2)
Ideology Trumps Good Sense
posted by C. Alexander Brown Canada on 17 Dec 2006 at 9:24 pmThe first national universal health insurance scheme was instituted by Emperor Franz Joseph II of the Austria Hungarian Empire. A man who hated socialism, which was just being born in Europe.
America is the only G6 country with an essentially disfunctional health care regime, where millions cannot afford access to proper medical care, and uncount numbers die because they cannot afford medication. Yet one reads the insane statement made frequently by various Americans, "We have the best health care system in the word."
A statement born of gross ignorance and political ideology. I challenge any competent institution; university or foundation or the AMA, to make a thorough and objective study of the health care system in the G8 countries plus Switzerland AND Cuba and compare them. How can a country lie to itself for so long on so vital a component of its structure and society as its global health care system's capabilities?
The US Health System Sucks
posted by Matilda Braithwaite on 18 Dec 2006 at 10:26 amPoliticians in the USA may say it has a good health care system. The public most definitely does not. I am supposed to have 'good cover'. I was in the UK for three years and France for two - I can assure you the US system is crap even for people with cover, to say nothing of the fifty or so million without.
Our leaders should lower their heads in shame!!
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