Thomson Reuters Study Finds More Patients Postponing Medical Care Due to Cost
Posted on: Monday, 20 April 2009, 13:52 CDT
Consumer Health Survey Shows Physician Visits Are First to Go When Money Gets Tight
These findings are based on a telephone survey of 12,000 households conducted from
Following are the key findings of the analysis:
- More Patients Postpone Care Due to Cost: One in five U.S. households postponed or cancelled medical care over the past year, up from 15.9 percent in 2006 when the survey last addressed this issue. Among 2009 respondents who postponed or cancelled care, 24.1 percent said cost was the primary reason. In 2006, the primary reason cited was lack of time.
- Physician Visits Are First to Go: The majority of postponed services (54.7 percent) were for physician visits, followed by imaging (8 percent), non-elective procedures (6.3 percent), and lab or diagnostic tests (5.7 percent).
- Rising Ranks of Uninsured: The percentage of households with employer-sponsored insurance showed a notable decline since the start of the recession, declining from 59 percent in early 2008 to 54.6 percent in early 2009. The population of respondents covered by Medicaid increased from 11.9 percent to 14.5 percent during the same period.
- Pessimistic Regarding Future Care: One in five (21 percent) said they expect to have difficulty paying for health insurance or healthcare services in the next three months. Respondents said the most likely services to be deferred are elective procedures (28 percent) and treatment for minor injuries (16 percent).
"The results of this survey have serious implications for public health officials, hospital administrators, and healthcare consumers," said
"If this trend continues, it will ultimately have an impact on our collective wellbeing," Pickens added.
The study is available here: http://provider.thomsonhealthcare.com/Articles/view/?id=2188 (one-time registration required). It is part of a series of research papers from the Healthcare business of Thomson Reuters analyzing the impact of the current recession on U.S. hospitals and healthcare using both public and proprietary data. Future reports will track hospital financial performance, healthcare outcomes, and additional consumer trends.
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The Healthcare business of Thomson Reuters produces insights, information, benchmarks and analysis that enable organizations to manage costs, improve performance and enhance the quality of healthcare. Thomson Reuters is the world's leading source of intelligent information for businesses and professionals. We combine industry expertise with innovative technology to deliver critical information to leading decision makers in the financial, legal, tax and accounting, scientific, healthcare and media markets, powered by the world's most trusted news organization. With headquarters in
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Source: PR Newswire
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