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Quote of the Day

Are You Better Off Today Than You Were Four Years Ago?

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Families USA
September 2004

In 2004, there were 14.3 million Americans whose health care costs totaled more than one-quarter of their earnings-up from 11.6 million in 2000, an increase of approximately 22.9 percent.

Among insured people, the number with health care costs in excess of one-quarter of their earnings rose from 8.4 million to 10.7 million between 2000 and 2004.

The result of (the) combination of higher premium costs and thinner coverage is that insured workers with serious illnesses, those with chronic conditions or disabilities, or those who experience a one-time medical crisis often find themselves in real financial trouble. In 2004, having health insurance does not necessarily guarantee protection against high medical bills. A growing number of insured workers are facing catastrophic health care costs.

http://www.familiesusa.org/site/DocServer?docID=4601&JServSessionIdr005=sf27qmna31.app26a

And…

Rising Health Costs, Medical Debt and Chronic Conditions
By Ha T. Tu
Center for Studying Health System Change
September 2004

Between 2001 and 2003, the proportion of people with high out-of-pocket costs relative to income increased overall. The increase occurred almost completely within the privately insured group, and the increase was most pronounced for low-income people. The proportion of low-income, privately insured, chronically ill people with out-of-pocket costs exceeding 5 percent of family income increased from 28 percent in 2001 to 42 percent in 2003-an increase of 50 percent. This change likely reflects the impact of increased patient cost sharing for insured people, as well as the fact that health care costs increased at a much faster pace than incomes. By 2003, low-income, chronically ill people covered by private insurance had become as likely as their low-income, uninsured counterparts to spend at least 5 percent of income on health care.

http://www.hschange.org/CONTENT/706/

Comment:
Currently the rhetoric on health care reform centers around two
approaches. Some recommend that patients be “empowered” to pay more for
their own care. Only the “let them eat cake” ideologues can be serious about
this approach since all objective studies confirm that the negative impact
on the health of nation would be catastrophic.

Those who are serious about trying to address the unmet health care needs of
the nation are supporting expansion of our current fragmented system of
funding care, especially providing incentives to expand private health care
coverage. But these two reports add to the plethora of studies confirming
that private plans no longer protect individuals against catastrophic
financial losses, nor do they ensure adequate access to essential care.

We will attain our goals of comprehensive coverage for everyone only when we
address the real problems facing us. We must eliminate the $300 billion
waste in administrative excesses. We must provide incentives for a strong
primary care base which has been shown to improve quality while decreasing
costs. We must budget capital improvements to prevent the excess high-tech
capacity which results in much higher costs but with unimproved or even
detrimental outcomes. We’ll never be able to make these essential changes
until we establish a universal risk pool from which funds can be allocated
on a rational basis.

We don’t need more of the flawed coverage provided by private plans. We need
single-payer national health insurance. Nothing less will work.

(Please share this message with others. Thanks.)
Don McCanne

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