High Health Costs Hit Women Hardest
CHICAGO - Most working-age women in the United States have too little health coverage, and often forgo needed care because of cost, U.S. researchers said on Monday.
They found that seven out of 10 women have no insurance, not enough insurance or are in debt because of medical bills.
"More families are making difficult choices between needed health care, making payments on mortgages or credit card debt and purchasing basic necessities," said Karen Davis, president of the Commonwealth Fund, a private health policy group that conducted the research.
President Barack Obama renewed his push for healthcare reform on Monday at a joint appearance with the American Medical Association, America's Health Insurance Plans and the American Hospital Association. The trade groups have pledged to reduce the annual growth of health spending by 1.5 percentage points, which they say will save $2 trillion over 10 years.
Members of Congress who will shepherd healthcare reform through the process have promised to have a bill by the end of the year.
The Commonwealth Fund team said rising health costs hit women harder because they have lower average incomes and spend more on healthcare than men, and because they use the health system more often than men.
The report was based on telephone surveys of 2,600 adults aged 19 to 64 between June and October 2007.
It found that 70 percent, or 63.8 million, working-age women are uninsured, underinsured, have medical bill problems or medical debt, or did not access needed care because of cost. That compared with 59 percent, or 51.9 million, working-age men.
The team also found that 52 percent of women were more likely to leave a prescription unfilled, skip a recommended medical test or treatment, or fail to seek needed medical care. That compared with just 39 percent of men.
And they found that 45 percent of women had medical debt or reported problems paying medical bills, compared with 36 percent of men.
Because the study is based on a 2007 survey, the researchers said it likely underestimates the problem because it does not account for the full impact of the current economic recession and job cuts.
An estimated 46 million Americans lack health insurance.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Maggie Fox and Eric Beech)
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6 Comments so far
Show AllI know first hand what it is like in the United States to have no health insurance, and to have a chronic condition that makes obtaining health insurance impossible. I can't get any medication to help me with my chronic pain that is a result of my illness, I can't get any practical answers about what I can do to manage my condition and it's affects. I know I am being literally left to die, currently not even able to be covered by state medical assistance, which is a joke. I know many people that are in the same situations, and they are all suffering in their own ways, waiting for their conditions to progress into paralysis, debilitation, and worse, racking up medical bills, and never getting any answers, or any practical advice due to lack of insurance.
I have serious doubts that health ins. paid for with our taxes would be any better. I worked as a neighborhood organizer, canvassing for statewide health insurance in WI. What I learned is that insurance companies threaten their workers into refusing to support these plans. In addition, those industries have iron fisted grips on the politician's gonads, so to speak. We might never see medicine return to the promising frontier that it might have been. In the meantime of all of the arguing about how to pay for medical care, doctors are wasting their potential by being stooges and people are croaking due to preventable and treatable conditions. We need help now, not later in the year, not by 2013... There is no more time for debate. We need help now.
Please, everyone that posts here on Common Dreams, and on other sites, out your Representative and Senators, that have not signed on to HR676, or Senator Bernie Sander's bill.
My Representative, Steve Kagen, an MD that should know better, has not signed on to HR676, and both of my senators, Kohl and Feingold have not signed on to senator Bernie Sander's bill.
Let's get active and expose these people.
Testosterone fuels the empire. No, petroleum fuels the empire! No, testosterone! No, petroleum!
Is that a NASCAR dilemma you are describing, rtdrury ?
i am this close to standing on a busy corner that says "american wake up, nationalize healthcare"
obama is an idiot
that whole thing on monday was a joke.
get obama out of office
Employer-based medical insurance worked OK in America until Ronny Raygun declared war on the working class nearly thirty years ago. Today the US is the only nation that continues to hold on to this obsolete paradigm.
Unless Obama abandons the employer-based paradigm, rescinds the 2003 Medicare pharma extortion legislation (that forbids the US Gov. from negotiating drug prices), and adopts a single-payer system, his "healthcare reform" will make it worse for women, and many men and children.
The insurance/pharma cartel wants a seat at the table to assure that Obama's reforms amount to nothing more than rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.