Home Page Contact Us Site Map
Home    Articles      Facts      Charity      Lawyers      Directory      Add a Link  &nbs
 
Alimta with cisplatin
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Alimta (pemetrexed disodium) for ...more
World Trade Center Asbestos
EPA collected wipe samples in a subset of the households that were...more
Diseases Caused By Asbestos Exposure
Pleural plaque is not cancer, and it does not cause cancer...more
Mesothelioma: A Killer Lurks in the Lungs

 

Insurance Falls Short for Some Workers

By THERESA AGOVINO
AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) -- Privately insured, low-income workers with chronic medical conditions such as diabetes and asthma are being financially squeezed as employers shift the burden of higher health care costs to employees, a new study found.

The number of such individuals spending more than 5 percent of their income on out-of-pocket medical costs soared 48 percent to 2.2 million people from 2001 to 2003, according to a study released Thursday by the Center for Health System Change.

The average individual probably spends about 2 percent of income on out-of-pocket health care costs, said Ken Sperling, a consultant at Hewitt Associates, a benefit consultancy based in Lincolnshire, Ill.

"That means the low income worker is making some serious trade-off between medical care and food," Sperling said. "These people are strapped as it is."

The study also found that one-in-three privately insured, chronically ill, low-income individuals are from families that struggle to pay medical bills. In such families, 10 percent of patients opted not to receive care, 30 percent delayed care and 43 percent didn't fill a prescription because of the expense.

Low-income was defined as a family income below 200 percent of the federal poverty level, or $36,800 for a family of four in 2003.

The study illustrates that it isn't just the uninsured who are struggling with medical expenses, said Paul Ginsburg, president of the Center, a nonpartisan policy research organization. Ginsburg said it is "penny wise and pound foolish" to continue cost shifting to people with serious medical problems because if they forego preventive care they wind up requiring costlier treatments later on.

But as double-digit growth in health care premiums has become routine in the last several years, employers have increasingly required employers to pony up more for their premiums, doctor visits, hospital stays and prescription drugs.

Family premiums in employer-sponsored plans jumped 11.2 percent to $9,950 annually, according to a survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research and Educational Trust. That study found the trend in cost-shifting had moderated but experts said it probably won't help low-income families since premiums are rising at five times the growth rate of wages and inflation.

High health care costs are limiting wage increases, which in turn squeezes people who have high medical expenses, said Ron Pollack, executive director of FamiliesUSA, a consumer group.

"Health care costs will continue to exert downward pressures on wages," said Pollack. "So whether it's overt or covert, people wind up spending more of their own money on health care costs."

Ginsburg said he doesn't see any near-term solution to the problem but hopes more companies will alter benefits so individuals with chronic conditions pay lower or no copayments than those with less serious ailments. Most plans don't make such distinctions now - although some are experimenting with programs to get people with serious medical problems to seek preventive care and avoid costly flare-ups in their conditions.

The study was based on a survey of 312,935 working-age adults between 18 and 64. It found there are about 57.3 million working-age Americans - 33 percent of the working population - with at least one chronic condition.

Those without insurance suffering from chronic problems also have severe challenges in paying their bills. Forty percent of them spend more than 5 percent on medical costs. And almost half live in families that struggle to pay medical bills. In those families, 40 percent of patients forgo care, two-thirds postpone care and 70 percent didn't fill a prescription.

Rosa Berry worries about how to pay for her medical expenses now that the nonprofit agency that provided her care closed its door. The 47-year old waitress says her diabetes costs $225 to $400 a month depending on which test she needs. Berry, who earns less than $18,000 a year, says she's unsure how she'll pay the bills.

"I'm numb," said Berry, of Queens, N.Y. "I'm past being scared."

She has applied for health insurance through a program for low-income people and hopes she'll get accepted. But even then - because of her pre-existing condition - benefits for diabetes won't begin for a year.

"I don't want charity," she said. "I just want affordable health care."

© 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

Bact to Original Article : Health News You Can Use

 

Continue with:

THURSDAY, Sept. 22 (HealthDayNews) -- Researchers say they've decoded the genome of the bacterium that causes Legionnaire's disease and are hunting for genes that can explain its occasional virulence and provide targets for better treatments. Legionnaire's disease is a respiratory infection that is so named because it was first described after a 1976 outbreak at a convention of former servicemen in Philadelphia.

THURSDAY, Sept. 23 (HealthDayNews) -- The history books say an Allied soldier downed the legendary German flying ace known as the Red Baron near the end of World War I in 1918, but a new study suggests that the baron was an agent in his own downfall. The real damage to Baron von Richthofen was done nine months earlier when he sustained a brain injury, which ultimately led to some fateful errors he made on his final flight, according to two American neuropsychologists.

(HealthDayNews) -- Here are the latest clinical trials, courtesy of CenterWatch: Psychosis A research study of an investigational medication for patients with Parkinson's disease and psychosis. Volunteers with a clinical diagnosis of idiopathic Parkinson's disease who also exhibit symptoms of psychosis, defined by the presence of visual and/or auditory hallucinations, with or without delusions of at least four weeks duration, may be able to participate. Research site located in Schenctady, NY.

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by editors of HealthDay: Lack of Quality Health Care Cited in 79,000 Deaths Lack of access to routine, quality health care led to as many as 79,000 deaths and $1.8 billion in avoidable medical costs in 2003, according to a new report from a private health care advocacy group.

THURSDAY, Sept. 23 (HealthDayNews) -- New research shows that healthy people with high levels of anger, hostility or depression also have high blood levels of C-reactive protein, an indicator of inflammation of the arteries.

 

 

Back to News Page

 

 

 


General Information About Malignant Mesothelioma
Where can I find Asbestos?
Diagnosing Mesothelioma
Asbestos Information
Damages and Settlements
Medical Procedures
Drugs and Medications
Mesothelioma News
Articles       Facts       Charity       Lawyers       Directory       Add a Link       Clinical Trials       State Coverage