The growing problem of inadequate insurance
American Medical News
April 4, 2005
Underinsured and overlooked: The growing problem of inadequate insurance
By Joel B. Finkelstein
Tens of millions of Americans have coverage that still leaves medical bills they cannot afford to pay, according to estimates by Consumers Union.
Now some physicians fear the problem is growing. They are seeing it regularly in their practices, often in the form of unpaid bills.
The culprit is increasing deductibles and other forms of cost sharing that employers are turning to in the face of steeply rising health care costs.
“Underinsurance is going to become a dramatic issue in the next two or three years,” predicted Thomas Bodenheimer, MD, MPH, an adjunct professor in the Family and Community Medicine Dept. at the University of California, San
Francisco, School of Medicine.
“More and more people are going to have plans that have huge deductibles and very large co-pays. Even HMOs now are beginning to have co-pays for hospital care that are quite significant, in addition to the deductible,” Dr.Bodenheimer said.
Just because someone has health insurance doesn’t necessarily mean they are covered, said Karen Pollitz, project director at the Institute for Health Care Research and Policy at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. In an anecdotal study conducted in conjunction with the American Diabetes Foundation, Georgetown researchers found that some people with diabetes keep paying their health insurance premiums even if that means they will not be able to afford their routine medical costs, Pollitz said.
They couldn’t simultaneously pay for test strips and their insurance, but were too afraid of going without any coverage to stop paying premiums. In those cases, having insurance actually led to their diabetes worsening, she said.
“Something is not always better than nothing,” Pollitz said. In the future, politics has to play a bigger role in ensuring that people not only have health insurance, but that it offers appropriate coverage, Dr.(Alan) Sager said.
http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2005/04/04/gvsa0404.htm
Comment: Although we continue to fret about the tragic consequences of allowing 45 million Americans to remain uninsured, we have not really made the commitment to effect change. But there is a prevailing issue that has provoked major policy changes. Those who are paying for health insurance coverage are very concerned about the dramatic increases in insurance premium prices. Ignoring the problem of the uninsured, and ignoring the problem of the explosion in actual health care costs, almost all policy activity has now been narrowly limited to efforts to control the price of premiums.
The obvious consequence of controlling premium prices in the face of the escalating costs of health care delivery is that out-of-pocket expenses must increase for the individuals utilizing health care services. Thus we are facing a massive epidemic of underinsurance due to this large coverage gap. The irony is that this will largely spare those of us who are healthy but threaten the financial security of those with greater health care needs.
Our policymakers have managed to change the crisis in health care from the single problem of covering the uninsured to the dual problem of both covering everyone and providing financial security for those with health care needs. We can and should have both. But we need to fire our current policymakers and replace them with those who really care.