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Just what is a Health Care Crisis? - Purple Oak Politics

Just what is a Health Care Crisis?

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Whatever you do don’t get sick! We all know this, we live it everyday.  Let’s face it, the current state of Health care in this country is a disgrace.  We are all one catastrophic illness away from a disaster.  Are there solutions? If so, what are they? The following article brings to focus the seriousness of this problem.  This is an issue that affects ALL Americans.  Please read and share thoughts, criticisms and or suggestions.

Medical bills underlie 60 percent of U.S. bankruptcies

Thu Jun 4, 2009 7:07am EDT
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE5530Y020090604

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Medical bills are involved in more than 60 percent of U.S. personal bankruptcies, an increase of 50 percent in just six years, U.S. researchers reported on Thursday.

More than 75 percent of these bankrupt families had health insurance but still were overwhelmed by their medical debts, the team at Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School and Ohio University reported in the American Journal of Medicine.

“Using a conservative definition, 62.1 percent of all bankruptcies in 2007 were medical; 92 percent of these medical debtors had medical debts over $5,000, or 10 percent of pretax family income,” the researchers wrote.

“Most medical debtors were well-educated, owned homes and had middle-class occupations.”

The researchers, whose work was paid for by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, said the share of bankruptcies that could be blamed on medical problems rose by 50 percent from 2001 to 2007.

“Unless you’re Warren Buffett, your family is just one serious illness away from bankruptcy,” Harvard’s Dr. David Himmelstein, an advocate for a single-payer health insurance program for the United States, said in a statement.

“For middle-class Americans, health insurance offers little protection,” he added.

The United States is embarking on an overhaul of its healthcare system, which is now a patchwork of public programs such as Medicare and employer-sponsored health insurance that leaves 15 percent of the population — 46 million people — with no coverage.

About 170 million people get health insurance through an employer but President Barack Obama says soaring healthcare costs are hurting the economy and forcing businesses to drop medical insurance for their workers.

CANCELED COVERAGE

“Nationally, a quarter of firms cancel coverage immediately when an employee suffers a disabling illness; another quarter do so within a year,” the report reads.

Obama told Congress on Wednesday he was open to making mandatory health insurance part of the overhaul but only with exemptions for the poor and for small businesses.

Neither Congress nor Obama are considering the kind of single-payer plan advocated by Himmelstein and his colleague Dr. Steffie Woolhandler.

“We need to rethink health reform,” Woolhandler said. “Covering the uninsured isn’t enough.

“Only single-payer national health insurance can make universal, comprehensive coverage affordable by saving the hundreds of billions we now waste on insurance overhead and bureaucracy.”

The researchers surveyed 2,134 random families who filed for bankruptcy between January and April in 2007, before the current recession began.

They used public bankruptcy court records and survey 1,032 respondents by telephone.

While only 29 percent directly blamed medical bills for their bankruptcy, 62 percent had medical bills that totaled more than 10 percent of family income, said an illness was responsible, had lost income due to illness or some other medical factor.

“Among common diagnoses, nonstroke neurologic illnesses such as multiple sclerosis were associated with the highest out-of-pocket expenditures (mean $34,167), followed by diabetes ($26,971), injuries
($25,096), stroke ($23,380), mental illnesses ($23,178), and heart disease ($21,955),” the researchers wrote.

(Editing by Bill Trott)

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Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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1 Comment

  1. Veda

    I think we *are* infact facing quite a problem here. I do not know if socialized medicine is the answer. Many who have experienced it say they did not like it. What I DO know is that what we are currently doing is NOT working. As the article explains, it is a *huge* problem.
    Here is what I think though - I strongly believe that this, like other issues that plague our nation, are symptoms (punn intended) of a cancer-currency system. We brought ourselves to this point by using fake fiat money. I am beginning to believe that the only way to “cure” the health care problem is to first fix the economy by overhauling the currency system and getting back to a gold standard. Ending the federal reserve system, fixing the income tax issue…. these will give way to the immoral, illegal and damaging economic (and physical) “sickness” caused by the medical and pharmaceutical companies..which is where the heart of our problem lies.
    It used to be, a person got sick - they went to the doctor and worked out a payment. The payment was reasonable. Doctors used to heal the sick, people used to go only when they were sick.
    Now - we are sick because we eat Monsanto vegetables and high fructose corn syrup and doctors are being trained in schools funded by pharmaceutical companies, and insurance is just another greed-industry that takes peoples money and provides no *product*. It’s a huge towering problem - one however that would begin to crumble if our financial system began to change. All sicknesses have a cause. We can overhaul the health care system all we like, but we cannot cure it until we fix the cause.

    One thing is for sure - something MUST be done. It’s deplorable how “health” is handled in this country.

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