Patients
without Health Insurance more likely to
delay seeking care for Heart Attack
Newswise — Patients who do not have health
care insurance, or those with insurance but
financial concerns about accessing health
care, are more likely to delay seeking
emergency care for a heart attack, according
to a study in the April 14 issue of JAMA.
Although health care insurance status has
been shown to affect use of preventive
screening and chronic care, little is known
about how this status affects decisions to
seek care during an emergency medical
condition, such as an acute myocardial
infarction (AMI; heart attack).
Also, studies have not examined whether
financial concerns from the patient’s
perspective about accessing medical care in
those with health care insurance is
associated with prehospital delays,
according to background information in the
article.
“Because prehospital delays are associated
with higher AMI morbidity and mortality,
demonstrating that patients with no
insurance or those with insurance but
reporting financial concerns about accessing
care are at higher risk for prehospital
delays is important because it would suggest
that reducing financial barriers to
care—perhaps through expansion of benefits
or health insurance coverage—could reduce
delays and improve outcomes,” the authors
write.
Kim G. Smolderen, Ph.D., of Tilburg
University, Tilburg, the Netherlands, and
colleagues examined the association between
lack of health insurance and financial
concerns about accessing care among those
with health insurance and the time from
symptom onset to arriving at the hospi¬tal.
The researchers used a registry of 3,721 AMI
patients enrolled between April 2005 and
December 2008 at 24 U.S. hospitals. Health
insurance status was categorized as insured
without financial concerns, insured but have
financial concerns about accessing care, and
uninsured.
Insurance information was determined from
medical records while financial concerns
among those with health insurance were
determined from structured interviews.
Prehospital delay times were categorized as
2 hours or less, between 2-6 hours, or
greater than 6 hours. These times were
adjusted for various demographic, clinical,
and social and psychological factors.
Of the 3,721 patients in the study group,
2,294 were insured without financial
concerns (61.7 percent), 689 were insured
but had fi¬nancial concerns about accessing
care (18.5 percent), and 738 were uninsured
(19.8 percent).
Among those with insurance re¬porting
financial concerns, 82.8 percent reported
having avoided medical care, 55.6 percent
reported having avoided taking medications
and 12.8 percent reported having had
difficulty obtaining health care services
due to costs.
Regarding delays in arriving at the
hospital, a greater proportion (36.6
percent) of insured patients without
financial concerns arrived within 2 hours of
symptom onset compared with 33.5 percent of
insured patients with financial concerns and
27.5 percent of uninsured patients.
“Conversely, a smaller proportion (39.3
percent) of insured patients without
financial concerns arrived more than 6 hours
from symptom onset compared with 44.6
percent of insured patients with financial
concerns and 48.6 percent of uninsured
patients,” the authors write.
After adjustment for various factors,
prehospital delays were associated with
insured patients with financial concerns and
with uninsured patients.
“These findings underscore important
consequences from inadequate health care
insurance coverage for the substantial
number of individuals in the United States
experiencing AMIs.
"The
data also suggest that efforts to reduce
prehospital delay times may have limited
impact without first ensuring that access to
health insurance is improved and financial
concerns are addressed in patients who seek
emergency care,” the authors write.
The authors add that it is likely that
uninsured patients and insured patients with
financial concerns about accessing care not
only de¬layed seeking care for AMI, but also
delayed care for other common medical
conditions, such as stroke, pneumonia, and
appendicitis.
“As a result, interventions that broaden and
ensure the affordability of health insurance
cov¬erage in the United States may reduce
times to presentation for all emergent
medical conditions.”
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