Health Care

45,000 Die Each Year Because They're Uninsured

Published September 18, 2009 @ 04:13PM PT

A much-discussed study put out by Harvard Medical School this week contains a shocking statistic: 45,000 deaths each year can be tied to lack of health insurance. The number by itself might not mean anything. But it amounts to a 40% greater likelihood of death than for those with coverage. It also represents a dramatic leap from the original Institute of Medicine study using similar methodology in 2001, where 18,000 deaths were linked to lack of insurance. In short, things are getting worse.

You know your health care system is in trouble when all the trends are in the wrong direction. The cost of health insurance –- which more than doubled in the past decade -– continues to go up. That leads to two out of three businesses contemplating cutting back on benefits and 9% eliminating benefits entirely. Add that to the number of people who lost their jobs and with it their health insurance, and you have perhaps the inevitable end result: an increase in the uninsured, even taking into account an increase in who gets public coverage through Medicaid, Medicare and SCHIP. That means an ever-increasing number of people putting off care because they can’t afford it, more using the emergency room for primary care because they have nowhere else to go.

We know a lot about who wind up being the uninsured. Hint: it’s neither the very rich nor the very poor. 8 in 10 come from families where at least one person works full time. 1 in 8 are children (although thanks to government-run SCHIP, that number is going down). The fastest growing income segment is individuals and families in the $50,000-$70,000 range, overwhelmingly because of a change in their employer sponsored insurance. And as we learn, they have a health risk with an increased chance of mortality comparable to being a former smoker, simply because they can’t afford quality health care.

That’s worth keeping in mind for the weeks ahead as we hit the next phase of the fight in Congress. The main question of health care reform is not just whether the House bill or Baucus bill should become the basis for legislation; it’s not the question of left vs. right; and in some respect it’s no longer even about whether health care was a right or a privilege. It’s about when will we look at the damage caused by not fixing the problem and finally say, “Enough!”

(Photo credit:http://www.flickr.com/photos/ari/ / CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

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Comments (5)

  1. Norman Hahn

    Uh, people die from injuries and diseases, not lack of coverage.  Remember, whether you have insurance or not, you will die.

    Posted by Norman Hahn on 09/18/2009 @ 05:11PM PT

  2. Martin Bring

    Then why do people buy health insurance and see doctors when they are ill?

    Could it be that when they are injured or sick having insurance and a family physician increases the probability they will get better and live longer?

    Posted by Martin Bring on 09/18/2009 @ 08:54PM PT

  3. Hoyt C. Noble

    The article is about ensuring people don't die prematurely and unnecessarily...ya know?

    Posted by Hoyt C. Noble on 09/18/2009 @ 09:38PM PT

  4. Reply to thread
  5. robin stelly

    This is the money quote from the paper's introduction:

    "Uninsurance is associated with mortality. The strength of that association appears similar to that from a study that evaluated data from the mid-1980s, despite changes in medical therapeutics and the demography of the ninsured since that time."

    I don't know how people can argue with this fact any longer.  Our health care system is leading to the preventable deaths of tens of thousands of people every year.  

     

    Posted by robin stelly on 09/19/2009 @ 12:32PM PT

  6. Neahle Madden

    Posted by Neahle Madden on 10/01/2009 @ 07:33PM PT

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Timothy Foley

Tim has been an online organizer and blogger on health care policy for the Obama for America campaign (during the primaries) and currently for the Committee of Interns and Residents/SEIU Healthcare, a labor union for intern and resident doctors. Views expressed here are Tim's, and don't represent the positions of CIR or SEIU.

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