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Press Release August 10, 2000 |
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-- At a Time of Unparalleled Prosperity
in the Richest Country in the World,
44 Million People Lack Health Coverage --
YONKERS, NY - A special six-month investigation
reported in the September issue of Consumer Reports finds that
while the U.S. spends more money on health care than any other
country, the nation's 44 million uninsured face a system of
second-class health care.
This special health insurance report
includes many compelling personal stories of people who are not
getting the care they need. The Consumer Reports story
indicates that the number of people across the country without health
insurance continues to grow, despite piecemeal attempts at reform.
Based on population growth alone, 47 million people will have no
insurance five years from now. Currently, 20 percent of the
population under age 65 lack health insurance.
To assess how people without coverage fare in
the health system, Consumer Reports interviewed more than 130
doctors, hospitals, clinics, health-policy experts, and uninsured
people. The key finding is that millions of people without health
insurance receive second-class health care, if they receive any at
all.
"People without insurance are getting
second-class health care in a country that spends more of its Gross
Domestic Product on health care than any other in the world," says
Trudy Lieberman, Director of the Center for Consumer Health Choices
at Consumers Union and author of this report. "And more people will
get this type of care as the numbers of uninsured climb." Some other
key conclusions and findings of the investigation include:
· If you are uninsured, care depends on
chance - how old you are, what county you live in, what piecemeal
programs exist, your diagnosis, how much money you can scrape
together, and your perceived worthiness. For example, babies and
children are more "marketable" when it comes to claims on the public
purse than 20-year-olds, who don't have the same cachet with
politicians. There may be money for mammograms, but not for treatment
of uninsured women found to have breast cancer.
· A two-tiered system of care exists for
chronically ill patients: the top tier for those who have the means
to buy state-of-the-art medications and technology, and the bottom
tier for those who do not. For example:
Uninsured patients with asthma, diabetes, or hypertension are often denied the care readily available to those who have insurance.
An uninsured patient in the midst of a seizure gets treatment for the seizure but no investigation to determine the cause.
An uninsured child in the middle of an asthma attack may be treated with medicine that opens the air passages but won't get medications to prevent future attacks.
· Waiting lists mount and rationing occurs
for most specialty care. The uninsured must resort to advocates who
will beg or borrow services.
· More people need care, but the system is
increasingly unable to provide it. These problems are intensifying as
more people leave the welfare rolls for jobs, losing government
Medicaid coverage as a result. Oftentimes these jobs do not offer
affordable health insurance. At the same time, most of the extra
money used by hospitals to treat the uninsured is gone, a result of
lower payments to providers by managed-care companies and the
reduction in federal payments to hospitals for care given to Medicare
beneficiaries and indigents.
The uninsured cannot rely solely on clinics for
adequate care. For example:
· The number of people seeking care from
clinics is up 45 percent over the past decade; hundreds of clinics
receive no federal money and depend on donations as well as state,
local, and private grants.
· Dental care is sparse, with some clinics
rationing it. The wait for adults can be four years long.
· To supply medicine to patients, clinics
most often rely on the goodwill of nearby physicians who donate
unused samples left by pharmaceutical salespeople, which can result
in compromised care.
· At the emergency room, uninsured
diabetics receive treatment only when their blood sugar had climbed
so high or sunk so low that their life is in danger.
· The uninsured who come to the emergency
room get prescriptions they often cannot afford to fill.
The uninsured are also being squeezed as never
before to pay for the care they do get. The bill, of course, isn't
merely a deductible or co-payment - it's the entire cost of care;
there is no insurance company to share the cost. Bills for care in
doctors' offices and hospitals are often far higher than what an
insurer would pay for the same services on behalf of someone with
coverage. The uninsured have no one to broker deals for their care.
So patients with very low incomes now help subsidize the lower
premiums for more affluent patients who do have insurance.
This special health insurance package also
examines reforms in Iowa and Tennessee, and looks at tax credits and
medical savings accounts, two solutions some in Congress are
promoting to help the uninsured buy their own health coverage. In a
section titled "Recommendations: Health Care for All," the
Consumer Reports article describes the piecemeal reforms in
health care in recent years and their failure to address the needs of
the growing numbers of uninsured. This analysis makes several key
points:
· Basic health care is a right in every
other industrialized nation, not a commodity to be bought by those
lucky enough to have money.
· Consumers Union, the publisher of
Consumer Reports, has supported efforts to cover all children
and expand Medicare to include adults ages 55 to 64, paired with
regulations that prevent discrimination by insurers against the
sick.
· But overall, the piecemeal approach
isn't working. Only a national system with broad pooling of risks
will assure that everyone gets the health care they need.
· The sickest Americans bear an unfairly
high burden of health care costs, and we can expect their share to
grow.
The September issue of Consumer Reports will be available August 22 wherever magazines are sold. To subscribe to Consumer Reports, call 1-800-234-1645. Information and articles from Consumer Reports can be accessed online at www.ConsumerReports.org. "Second-class medicine" can be accessed free online from the home page, beginning August 10th.
The material above is intended for legitimate news entities only; it may not be used for commercial or promotional purposes. Consumer Reports® is published by Consumers Union, an independent, nonprofit testing and information-gathering organization, serving only the consumer. We are a comprehensive source of unbiased advice about products and services, personal finance, health, nutrition, and other consumer concerns. Since 1936, our mission has been to test products, inform the public, and protect consumers.
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