- 10 pharmacy leaders on the revenue streams that’ll define survival by 2030
- Healthcare C-suites dive into alternative revenue streams
- Indiana University Southeast earns counseling accreditation
- Ohio safety-net provider to acquire behavioral health organization
- How teleneurology is expanding access and easing the neurologist shortage
- Medical groups split on breast cancer screening age: What to know
- Utah AI prescription pilot prompts safety concerns: Viewpoint
- Trump’s CDC director nominee: 6 things to know
- Connecticut dentists among growing number of non-hospital clinicians suing patients over medical debt: Report
- Idaho hospital transfers imaging patients after cyber incident
- Integris prepares for clinic, service line closures amid funding concerns
- UnitedHealthcare pares back prior authorizations, speeds up payments for rural providers
- 3 in 10 adults turn to digital mental health tools: 4 study notes
- Former Providence workers sue system over alleged 401(k) losses
- Maine boosts reimbursement rates for dental procedures requiring anesthesia
- Indiana ASC performs 1st Misha procedure in state
- AdventHealth opens outpatient center in Florida
- Sage Dental opens Tennessee, Florida practices
- Standard Dental Labs expands board of directors
- Statement on the Amendments to Form PF
- Early onset CRC tied to education level: Study
- Update on the SEC’s Work Toward Treasury Clearing Implementation
- Another physician faces lawsuit for alleged DME fraud scheme
- UB dental school receives $3.7M for new specialty care center
- 4 dental leadership moves to know
- ADA updates sedation, general anesthesia guidelines: 5 notes
- 'Hospitals adverse to transparency'—clashing industry groups spar on mulligan 340B rebate pilot
- 5 new disruptions to the anesthesia workforce
- The federal policies reshaping dentistry
- New York system opens 65K-square-foot outpatient facility
- San Diego County opens $28M crisis stabilization unit
- 4 dentists making headlines
- Illinois behavioral health provider to close amid staffing, funding challenges
- APA unit offers digital mental health tools library
- Michigan surgeon sentenced in $7M fraud scheme
- “PF” Stands for Please Fix: Statement on the Proposed Amendments to Form PF
- A look inside Highmark and Spring Health's mental well-being partnership
- USC School of Medicine names Dr. Earl Strum as anesthesiology chair
- CHS grows ASC footprint across Alabama, Alaska: 6 things to know
- CVS, Mass General Brigham primary care deal would increase annual care spending by $40M, report predicts
- Beyond Reporting: Realizing Continuous Safety Surveillance for Medical Devices
- Beyond Reporting: Realizing Continuous Safety Surveillance for Medical Devices
- Georgia hospital opens 40K-square-foot heart institute
- Safeguarding Scientific Publishing from AI Hallucinations and Fabricated Citations
- Safeguarding Scientific Publishing from AI Hallucinations and Fabricated Citations
- AIDS Relief Program Sees Drops in Testing and Diagnoses After Disruptions
- Baby Food Recalled After Rat Poison Discovered in Jar
- Report Finds Drug Prices Rising Despite Trump Pricing Deals
- Trump Backs Psychedelic Research
- Styker Adds IVL Technology to Peripheral Vascular Portfolio with Amplitude Acquisition
- Styker Adds IVL Technology to Peripheral Vascular Portfolio with Amplitude Acquisition
- Trump order to fast-track psychedelics for mental illness: 4 notes
- Hippocratic AI rolls out 2 new tools aimed at expanding clinical access, improving nurse workflow
- In Connecticut, doctors now sue patients most over medical bills, surpassing hospitals
- Sanofi touts tolerability of COVID shot Nuvaxovid in head-to-head trial vs. Moderna's mNexspike
- Naloxone's OD-Reversing Powers Challenged By Today's Opioids, Tests Show
- Extra Antibiotic Doesn't Reduce Infection Risk During Surgery To Fix Complex Fractures, Trial Finds
- Clinical Trial Suggests Two Simple Ways To Fight Chemo-Related Brain Fog
- E-Cigarette Taxes Won't Necessarily Cause An Increase In Smoking, Study Says
- Dreams Affect Your Morning Mood In Surprising Ways, Study Finds
- Weed Blunts Brain Development In Teens
- Genentech shifts Hemlibra marketing focus to patient stories as competition approaches
- In Connecticut, Doctors Now Sue Patients Most Over Medical Bills, Surpassing Hospitals
- An Arm and a Leg: The Accidental Architect of America’s Drug Patent Problem
- Neurogene hires new CCO as it eyes commercial future for its Rett gene therapy
- Biovac nets $108M finance package to build Africa’s first fully integrated vaccine plant
- Theramex exits self-regulatory body after ‘systemic’ compliance failures
- Trump orders FDA to fast-track reviews of psychedelic drugs after lobbying by podcaster
- Bayer falls short in bid to block J&J’s survival claims in prostate cancer clash
- Biogen bullish on America with Durham Bulls team up
- AbbVie launches ‘PSO Done’ psoriasis campaign with cross-agency effort
- DOJ seeks immediate asset freeze, receivership against telehealth company Zealthy
- New Clues Explain Why Immunotherapy Fails in Pancreatic Cancer
- Does My Child Have a Language Disorder?
- Journalists Talk Hot Health Topics: Urgent Care Clinics Performing Abortions and Doulas’ Pay
- AACR: FDA vet Pazdur bemoans state of agency, warns of political influence and ‘sense of anxiety’
- Tu nuevo terapeuta: conversador, indiscreto… y difícilmente humano
- What the Health? From KFF Health News: A New CDC Nominee, Again
- States Update Guardianship Laws To Keep Children of Immigrants Out of Foster Care
- Dental community mourns dentist killed in murder-suicide
- Iris Telehealth offers behavioral health analytics platform
- Oscar unveils Lucie, its one-stop shop for individual market plans, supplemental benefits
- American Medical Group Association partners with Talkiatry to expand psych access
- 5 states regulating AI in mental health
- Affordability, transparency: A look at large employers' top healthcare concerns
- New Weight Loss Research Questions Need for GLP-1 Drugs
- Trump Names CDC Director Pick
- SocialRx teams up with FQHC in NYC to prescribe arts and culture for chronically ill patients
- FDA To Review Whether To Allow More Access To Certain Peptides
- Rising Colon Cancer Deaths Hit Younger Adults Without Degrees Hardest
- The Healthccare Burnout Backlask (pt 4): Why Contract Negotiation Has Become a Core Strategic Skill for Healthcare Administrators
- The Healthccare Burnout Backlask (pt 4): Why Contract Negotiation Has Become a Core Strategic Skill for Healthcare Administrators
- Over 80% of PCPs concerned about financial stability over next several years
- Industry Voices—DOJ jumps into 340B cases over state law, raising questions about federal plans for the program
- FDA's accelerated approval pathway needs stronger transparency, evidence standards: ICER
- Most People Would Take A Blood Test For Alzheimer's, Study Says
- This Sexually Transmitted Infection Linked To Heart Attack, Stroke
- How Playtime at Age 2, Especially with Parents, Shapes Teen Fitness Habits
- New Depression Treatment Matches ECT with Less Memory Loss, Study Says
- Memory Problems? Your Salt Intake Could Make Matters Worse, Study Says
- Ultra-Processed Foods Linked To Fatty Muscles, Potential Knee Arthritis
- Your New Therapist: Chatty, Leaky, and Hardly Human
- Teva scores in appeal as court revives $177M verdict against Lilly in migraine patent spat
- Gen AI chatbots continually struggle with differential diagnoses, Mass General Brigham study finds
- Listen: With Little Federal Regulation, States Are Left To Shape the Rules on AI in Health Care
- Fierce Pharma Asia—Astellas’ stem cell therapy rethink; GSK’s bullish ADC plan; Daiichi’s OTC sale
- BIO comes out swinging with 'Fight of Our Lives' campaign for the industry’s 50th birthday
- Nuevas reglas federales de Medicaid exigen un mes de trabajo. Algunos estados piden más
- Cae la inscripción de inmigrantes en Medi-Cal y expertos lo atribuyen a las políticas de Trump
- Remarks at the Options Market Structure Roundtable
- Former Deputy Surgeon General Erica Schwartz, M.D., nominated as CDC director
- Verily Health simplifies medical jargon alphabet soup with AI-powered app in new campaign
- Cattywampus: Statement on the CAT Concept Release
- Providers' advantage on out-of-network billing disputes likely to continue: Capstone
- Butterflies and Condors: Remarks at the Options Market Roundtable
- Viatris, Teva kick off separate recalls over dissolution, raw material issues
- Rising ACA Costs Leave Many Unable To Pay for Coverage
- One Lot of Xanax Recalled Nationwide Over Quality Issue, FDA Says
- Cough Drops From Several Brands Being Recalled, FDA Says
- CDC May Get New Leader as Officials Consider Erica Schwartz
- Beyond the Visit: How AI Companion Technology Is Reshaping Outcomes for Aging Populations
- Statement at the Roundtable on Options
- Opening Remarks at the Options Market Structure Roundtable
- APA launches resource library for trusted digital mental health tools
- E-Bikes And E-Scooters A Growing Menace On City Streets, Study Says
- 'Absent or trivial' effects: Anti-amyloid Alzheimer's drugs called into question once again
- RFK Jr. kicks off string of congressional hearings to talk White House budget plan
- This Simple Step Could Improve The Benefits From Your Regular Workouts
- New Alzheimer's Drugs Provide No Meaningful Benefit, Major Evidence Review Concludes
- Air Pollution and Weather Tied to Migraines
- Study Says Stress, Weight And Hormones Alter Timing of Puberty in Girls
- Why Walking Remains Unsteady After Partial Spinal Cord Injury
- Roche to launch another Elevidys study after EU rejection of Duchenne gene therapy
- Lilly answers FDA's call for more Foundayo safety info, plotting diabetes filing in parallel
- Omnicom brews Olixir from FCB Health, rebranding storied agency after Interpublic takeover
- DiMe-led initiative brings together pharma, virtual providers, digital pharmacies to develop blueprint for DTC pharma models
- UPDATED: Heeding RFK Jr.'s call, FDA reclassifies 12 unapproved peptides ahead of advisory committee meeting
- Carrot launches proprietary AI platform for personalized fertility, family care
- Brain Cancer Awareness: The Importance of Molecular Testing for Patients with Rare Brain Tumors
- Wildlife Trade Tied To Higher Risk of Diseases Spreading to Humans
- EPA Delays Decisions on 'Forever Chemicals'
- Yes, This is the Worst Pollen Season Ever — Until Next Year
- New Weight Loss Pill, Foundayo, Gets Approval But FDA Seeks More Safety Data
- Seqster launches new data tool to turn clinical sites into 'research-ready data collection points'
- AI simulates real-world HCP feedback on pharma content
- Does Your Child Have A Concussion? These Are The Signs, Review Says
- AI Reveals Negative Labels in Medical Records for Sickle Cell Patients
- 'Food-as-Medicine' Improves Life for Heart Failure Patients
- Silent Heart Rhythm Problem Might Triple Risk Of Heart Failure In Seniors
- Agile partnerships drive faster pharma innovation
The Commonwealth Fund paid SSRS of Pennsylvania to conduct their 2023 Health Care Affordability Survey. SSRS asked U.S. adults with health insurance, and those without, about their ability to afford their health care — whether costs prevented them from getting care, whether provider bills left them with medical debt, and how these problems affected their lives.
The responses show many Americans, regardless of where their insurance comes from, have inadequate coverage that’s led to delayed or forgone care, significant medical debt, and worsening health problems. While having health insurance is always better than not having it, the survey findings challenge the implicit assumption that health insurance in the United States buys affordable access to care. Difficulties affording care are experienced by people in employer, marketplace, and individual-market plans as well as people enrolled in Medicaid and Medicare.
In today's report, The Commonwealth Fund presents findings for survey respondents who were insured for the full year and those who spent all or part of the year uninsured. People who were insured all year are grouped by the coverage source they reported at the time of the survey, though it should be noted that some may have switched insurance during the year.
SSRS interviewed a nationally representative sample of 7,873 adults age 19 and older between April 18 and July 31, 2023. Their analyses focus on 6,121 respondents of working age, those 19 to 64. To learn more about the survey, see “How We Conducted This Survey” at the 2023 Health Care Affordability Survey link.
Here is a report filed by UPI:
https://www.upi.com/Health_News/2023/10/26/medical-debt-commonwealth-fund-report/9331698265055/
Affording healthcare a struggle for half of working-age Americans, survey finds
By Susan Kreimer - October 26, 2023NEW YORK, Oct. 26 (UPI) -- Affording healthcare is a struggle for half of working-age Americans, and almost one-third are overwhelmed by medical debt, according to a new survey of more than 6,100 adults by The Commonwealth Fund released Thursday.
The New York-based private foundation, which is focused on affordable and quality healthcare for all, noted that medical debt is a growing problem that makes insured and uninsured Americans sicker and poorer. And affordability challenges affect people on employer plans, Medicaid, Medicare and marketplace coverage.
"I was not shocked at all by what we found," Dr. Joseph Betancourt, president of The Commonwealth Fund, told reporters at a briefing on the findings. He added that "patients' experiences range from confusion to frustration to legitimate threats to their health and well-being."
For the survey, telephone and online interviews were conducted in English and Spanish with a nationally representative sample of 7,873 adults age 19 and older between April 18 and July 31, 2023. Then, the analysis focused on 6,121 respondents of working age, between 19 and 64 years old.
The survey focused in part on the cost of health insurance.
"While having insurance is always better than not having it, the findings challenge the assumption that health insurance coverage in the U.S. buys affordable access to care," the survey report said.
It noted that "large shares of insured working-age adults surveyed said it was very difficult or somewhat difficult to afford their healthcare."
That included 43% of those with employer coverage, 57% with marketplace or individual-market plans, 45% with Medicaid and 51% with Medicare.
Delayed healthcare
"Many insured adults said they or a family member had delayed or skipped needed healthcare or prescription drugs because they couldn't afford it in the past 12 months," the reported said.
That included 29% of those with employer coverage, 37% covered by marketplace or individual-market plans, 39% enrolled in Medicaid and 42% with Medicare.
"Cost-driven delays in getting care or in missed care made people sicker," the report said. "Fifty-four percent of people with employer coverage who reported delaying or forgoing care because of costs said a health problem of theirs or a family member got worse because of it, as did 61% in marketplace or individual-market plans, 60% with Medicaid and 63% with Medicare.
"Insurance coverage didn't prevent people from incurring medical debt. Thirty percent of adults with employer coverage were paying off debt from medical or dental care, as were 33% of those in marketplace or individual-market plans, 21% with Medicaid and 33% with Medicare."
Many Americans are saddled with medical debt because "we still have gaps in our insurance system, leaving millions without coverage for short or extended periods of time," the report's lead author, Sara Collins, senior vice president for health care coverage and access and tracking health system performance at The Commonwealth Fund, told UPI via email.
Significant hardships
For people with health insurance, copays and deductibles or narrow provider networks pose significant hardship. On a tight household budget, it may be difficult to cover the bills, leading to medical debt that has to be paid off over time.
"While media stories often focus on people who experience emergencies that leave them with lots of bills they can't pay, we find that half of people reporting medical debt said it resulted from treating an ongoing condition" such as cancer or diabetes, Collins said.
The report "is a staggering indictment of U.S. healthcare and the financial burdens that it imposes on Americans," Jonathan Oberlander, a professor and chair of social medicine and health policy and management at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, told UPI via email.
"No part of American health insurance is safe: Persons with Medicare, Medicaid, individually purchased and employer-offered coverage, as well as the uninsured, are vulnerable to the high costs of medical care."
As the report points out, "even with insurance, more than 1 in 5 Americans must pay off debt from medical or dental care," Dr. Joshua Liao, an internal medicine physician and associate chair for health systems at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle, told UPI via email.
He noted that "while the issues encompassed by the survey unfortunately aren't new, its findings are still timely and noteworthy."
High deductibles
A large part of the problem lies in high deductibles on state healthcare marketplaces. The average cost on a silver plan is $4,000 to $5,000 nationally, Leighton Ku, a George Washington University health policy professor and board member of the DC Health Benefit Exchange Authority, told UPI in a telephone interview.
"That's at the heart of why so many people who are insured have affordability problems." Ku said.
Not being aware of the cost of healthcare services may lead to unpleasant surprises.
"Unlike grocery shopping, in which I always see the price of an apple before I put it in my cart, patients rarely know the price of a visit, test, procedure or a new prescription drug ordered by their healthcare provider in advance," Ellen Meara, a professor of health economics and policy at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, told UPI via email.
"They may learn only when they get a bill, often much later, requiring them to pay whatever insurance will not pay."
One of the best ways to reduce medical debt is to expand insurance access.
So far, 10 states have elected not to expand Medicaid eligibility under the Affordable Care Act, despite consistent evidence that this would reduce medical debt and improve access to care, William Schpero, assistant professor in the division of health policy and economics of population health sciences at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, told UPI via email.
"Congress can also take steps to improve the affordability of private insurance by extending -- and further increasing -- enhanced premium subsidies for plans purchased on state insurance marketplaces that are currently set to expire in 2025," Schpero said.
I am so old I can remember President Obama's Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act shtick:
“In an Obama administration, we’ll lower premiums by up to $2,500 for a typical family per year.”
“[W]hatever ideas exist in terms of bending the cost curve and starting to reduce costs for families, businesses, and government, those elements are in this bill.”
“I will sign a universal health care bill into law by the end of my first term as president that will cover every American.”
“So this law means more choice, more competition, lower costs for millions of Americans.”
This survey shows the depth and the agonies of Obamacare's failure - nothing more and nothing less. The conductors of this survey seem to be doubling down on PPACA in their analyses and recommendations. And the Michigan government has, as well.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.













