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Health Affairs Web-Exclusive article finds
cost of Prescription Drugs more of a problem
today for all with chronic conditions
Bethesda,
MD -- As the number of
working-age adults who have major chronic
conditions grew between 1997 and 2006, those
without health coverage in this group
experienced substantial erosion in access to
health care, according to a
new study by Kaiser Family Foundation
researchers published today as a
Health Affairs Web Exclusive.
The number of working-age adults who
reported having at least one of seven major
chronic conditions grew 25 percent since
1997, to a total of nearly 58 million by
2006.
Besides overall growth in the adult
population, the increase over the period
reflects rising rates of chronic disease
prevalence among nonelderly adults.
The research focused on nonelderly adults
with chronic conditions because their
greater health needs make them particularly
sensitive to changes in the economy and the
health care system.
Studies have found that people with chronic
conditions disproportionately account for
three-quarters of all personal medical
spending in the United States.
As the nation struggles with unchecked
health care costs, growth in the chronically
ill population and the potential
consequences of their unmet needs for care
is cause for concern.
The new study, authored by Catherine Hoffman
and Karyn Schwartz, analyzes ten years of
data (1997-2006) using access to care
measures from the National Health Interview
Survey for nonelderly adults having at least
one of these seven major chronic conditions:
heart disease, hypertension, stroke,
diabetes, asthma, emphysema, and cancer.
Within this group, comparisons were made
between those who were uninsured, publicly
insured through Medicaid, and privately
insured.
While large differences
in access to care between uninsured and
insured adults with chronic conditions
existed in 1997, the insurance divide grew
even wider by 2006.
In general, the proportions of Medicaid enrollees
and privately insured people having problems
getting care were similar, and both
proportions were much lower than the
proportion of the uninsured who experienced
problems getting care, after adjusting for
social and health differences among the
different groups.
Regular monitoring and
continuity in a person’s care are important
in managing a chronic condition effectively.
Yet the authors found that:
-
More uninsured adults with a chronic
condition reported not having a usual
source of care between 1997 and 2006
(growing from 29% to 34%) and not having
seen a health professional at all during
the year (growing from 21% to 26%).
Also, by 2006, more of this group was
not seeing medical specialists.
-
In contrast, access to providers improved among the
privately insured and was unchanged
among those with Medicaid over time.
However, the rising
costs of health care on top of slow growth
in wages over this time period adversely
affected both the insured and uninsured with
chronic conditions. The authors found the
following cost-related trends:
-
More people in all three insurance groups reported
having unmet needs for prescription
drugs because of cost in 2006 compared
to 1997. Among the privately insured
with chronic conditions, the share
reporting this access problem nearly
doubled, growing from 5 percent in 1997
to 9.5 percent by 2006. The comparative
trend among the uninsured: 25 percent
growing to 33 percent; among those with
Medicaid: 5 percent growing to 8 percent
by 2006. With prescription drugs playing
an increasing role in chronic condition
management, this finding may be a
particular cause for concern.
-
In general, more of both the privately insured and
uninsured with chronic conditions
reported having an unmet need for care
because of its cost over the period,
while those with Medicaid coverage
experienced no change. Still, the
insurance divide remained wide, with the
uninsured being more than four times as
likely as the privately insured to have
an unmet need for care (35% versus 8%).
Given the consistent
erosion in heath care access among the
uninsured over these ten years, and given
that more people with insurance are now
beginning to be affected as well, Hoffman
and Schwartz conclude, “Controlling health
system costs overall will require effective
and efficient care for people with chronic
conditions, because they use the majority of
health care services in this country.
"These
high costs put people with chronic
conditions on the front lines to test major
and even minor reforms of our health
insurance system.”
The full article, “Eroding
Access among Nonelderly Adults with Chronic
Conditions: Ten Years of Change,”
is available at
www.kff.org or
www.healthaffairs.org.
The Kaiser
Family Foundation is a non-profit, private
operating foundation dedicated to providing
information and analysis on health care
issues to policymakers, the media, the
health care community, and the general
public. The Foundation is not associated
with Kaiser Permanente or Kaiser Industries.
Health
Affairs, published by Project HOPE, is the
leading journal of health policy. The
peer-reviewed journal appears bimonthly in
print with additional online-only papers
published weekly as Health Affairs Web
Exclusives at
www.healthaffairs.org.
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