A new study finds that even after they have heart attacks or strokes and are admitted to hospitals, the uninsured are more likely to die than those who carry private insurance.
A gap persisted even after the researchers adjusted for disparities in the patients’ underlying health, socioeconomic status and other factors.
Researchers analyzed more than 150,000 discharges of working-age Americans, ages 18 to 64, who were hospitalized for heart attack, stroke or pneumonia. The data was drawn from the 2005 Nationwide Inpatient Sample.
The study found that uninsured patients who had heart attacks were 52 percent more likely to die in the hospital than the privately insured, and those who had a stroke were 49 percent more likely to die in the hospital.
“We thought there would be some disparity and a little bit of a difference, but we were surprised there were such significant differences,” said Dr. Omar Hasan, a hospitalist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston who was the lead author of the study, in the Journal of Hospital Medicine.
One reason, Dr. Hasan suggested, may be that patients who have trouble getting care may have more advanced disease.
“We know for a fact that people who are uninsured delay seeking care,” he said.
The pattern continues: In the US, driving better healthcare and bringing down costs start and end with the basics. This new study points out how our system catches disease much to late in the process. For those that are uninsured, almost by definition, they dont have annual checkups and preventative checkups. Therefor, diseases are caught much too late, are very expensive to treat, and lead to a much higher level of patient mortality.
Education is going to be paramount as the new healthcare bill kicks in. People without insurance for decades, all of a sudden will have insurance. However, their behaviors wont change all of a sudden. They are used to going to the ER's as their first point of service. Further education will be required on how to access the healthcare system. To the non-user, it can be mindboggling.
0 Responses to "US Healthcare Quality comes down to the basics: Uninsured More at Risk Even in Hospitals"
Post a Comment