Trade-Offs Getting Tougher: Problems Paying Medical Bills Increase for U.S. Families, 2003-2007
By Peter J. Cunningham
Center for Studying Health System Change
September 2008
About 57 million Americans were in families with problems paying medical bills in 2007–an increase of 14 million people since 2003, according to a new national study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). Problems paying medical bills increased for both nonelderly insured and uninsured people. Although the rate of medical bill problems is much higher for uninsured people, most people with medical bill problems–42.5 million–had insurance coverage. About 2.2 million people with medical bill problems were in families that filed for bankruptcy as a result of their medical bills, and a much larger number reported other financial consequences, such as problems paying for other necessities and having to borrow money. The increase in medical bill problems–especially among insured people–is the main reason why more people reported unmet medical needs because of cost in 2007 than in 2003.
http://www.hschange.org/CONTENT/1017/
And…
Health Benefits In 2008: Premiums Moderately Higher, While Enrollment In Consumer-Directed Plans Rises In Small Firms
By Gary Claxton, Jon R. Gabel, et al
Health Affairs
September 24, 2008
Average annual premiums in 2008 are $4,704 for single coverage and $12,680 for family coverage. These amounts are about 5 percent higher than premiums were last year. Enrollment in high-deductible health plans with a savings option increased to 8 percent of covered workers, up from 5 percent in 2007. Deductibles in preferred provider organizations, the plan type with the largest enrollment, increased from 2007 levels.
http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/full/hlthaff.27.6.w492/DC1
And…
Studies Show Strain of Medical Bills
By Reed Abelson
The New York Times
September 24, 2008
Even as Washington and Wall Street debate the best way to avert an economic meltdown, increasing numbers of Americans are struggling with another financial crisis: the growing burden of unpaid medical bills.
Two studies released Wednesday morning provide further evidence of the toll health care is increasingly placing on working families, even for those who have health insurance. And as employees are paying more medical expenses out of their own pockets, they are having a harder time coming up with the money.
While policy analysts acknowledge that finding any new money to expand coverage may prove difficult, some also say the terms of the debate may be changing as policy makers and the public rethink their positions on the need for regulation and the role of the government in industry — including the health care system.
“We can now imagine a government takeover that we could not imagine before,” (said Len Nichols, a health economist at the New America Foundation).
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/25/business/25health.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
The bad (but not unexpected) news is that there is no relief from the unrelenting increases in health care costs for individuals and their families. But there is one number that should alarm all of us: 42.5 million people WITH INSURANCE COVERAGE have medical bill problems in spite of their coverage.
Whereas most advocacy efforts for reform have been directed towards expanding health care coverage to include more individuals, the proposals have included compromises designed to make health insurance more affordable. These compromises, involving fewer benefits and greater cost sharing, have made health care LESS affordable. Just ask those 42.5 million insured individuals who have medical bill problems.
It is time for us to get past the process of trying to bring everyone under the private insurance umbrella that leaks like a sieve. We need to adopt a financing system that is effective in preventing individuals with health care needs from having to face the additional burden of medical debt.
The private insurance industry covers primarily the relatively healthy: the healthy workforce, their healthy families, and the healthy sector of the individual insurance market. But some of these healthy individuals do develop significant medical problems, and for tens of millions of them, the private plans have not prevented medical debt. Shouldn’t that be the purpose of health insurance?
A government takeover of health care financing could provide us with the coverage that actually would work: a single payer system that would enable each of us to access the health care that we need, without exposing us to the additional burden of medical debt. If the government can serve as responsible stewards of our mortgage markets, surely they can become responsible stewards of our health care financing.