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Cost of caring for Missourians without health insurance impacts everyone in the state

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

(Photo)
Dr. Jason Fish and dental assistant Shalen Clark worked on a tooth filling for Medicaid patient Annie Bell at Cross Trails Medical Center in Cape Girardeau. (FRED LYNCH ~ flynch@semissourian.com ) [Order this photo]

The cost of health care and insurance, debated and discussed although not resolved at the state and federal levels, is more than just a grumbling point among Missouri consumers.

A study done by the Cover Missouri Project in conjunction with the Missouri Foundation for Health concludes that the cost of caring for uninsured Missourians impacts everyone in the state.

Being uninsured carries life or death consequences, the study found. Nearly 10 working-age uninsured adults in Missouri died each week in 2006, and approximately 2,800 adults in Missouri died between 2000 and 2006 due to a lack of health coverage, according to Cover Missouri.

The cost of caring for the uninsured is borne by insured Missourians and continues to rise along with the number of uninsured Missouri residents.

Julie Metzger, director of social services at Southeast Missouri Hospital, was among the local health care professionals who attended a meeting where a Cover Missouri team discussed the situation. Children and the elderly have protection, Metzger noted, but the people in the middle are the ones at biggest risk, especially those who don't have employer-provided insurance and can't afford to carry their own.

Medicare covers people 65 and over, and for people with limited income, there's Medicaid, but for those in between, not having coverage can mean a difference between life or death.

"If you get cancer or are disabled and you're 40, you have to be disabled for two years before you can get Medicare," Metzger said. "The bills are going to be mounting. If you need expensive cancer treatment and are unable to work, the insurance is not there anymore."

The costs of health care for the uninsured go beyond the obvious. According to information from the Missouri Foundation for Health, treatment for the uninsured costs more because they frequently wait to seek treatment until they are seriously ill; they can't afford early screening and preventive care.

"When they do seek treatment," Metzger said, "their condition is in a much more advanced stage and much more costly. If they had had the ability to seek treatment in the beginning, it might have been something that might have been treated easily."

Frequently people seek treatment in emergency rooms because they know they won't be turned away because of a lack of ability to pay. The MFH notes that that reduces the "quality and availability of personal health services," even though, as Metzger says, when they do present at the emergency room they really are sick.

Economic consequences of poor health care leads to lower productivity on the job, time lost from work and lower earnings, the MFH reports. In addition, according to the MFH, workers in poor health earned about 11 percent less per year than those in good health.

"It's very eye opening when you think about the transitioning and changes," Metzger said. "None of us expect to get sick while we're still working. When we do we could have big problems."

Social workers like Metzger try to help patients as best they can, she said, by seeking out other options, helping them get on Medicaid, finding help with medication from pharmaceutical companies, health education and referring to low-cost clinics.

Cover Missouri is seeking ways to make health care accessible at a reasonable cost for everyone, but it will take legislative action. According to Ryan Barker, health policy analyst with the MFH, "Unless policymakers choose to act to address this problem the number of uninsured will continue to grow and the significance of the problem will have an increasingly negative impact on the entire health care system."

TBY (The Best Years) is a publication of the Southeast Missourian that serves the older adult audience. Paper copies are available at the Southeast Missourian offices and on racks around Cape Girardeau.


Comments
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Always leery of the 'bandwagon' approach of salesmanship. Presents that big 'yuck' factor. "C'mon guys, LET'S go!" "We" substituted in place of "me" or "I", "our" substituted in place of "my", and so on.

Universal Health Care may be a great concept, but it seems that the quite vocal advocates are also the ones that are in the most need for someone else to 'buck up' for the program, essentially portraying UHC as an entitlement of all citizens as a means to justify their own 'cost-sharing' coverage benefits under such a plan.

Bringing emotion and sensationalism into the picture makes for a bigger media attraction than does boring topics such as logic and reason.

If it's such a great win-win-win plan, then why hasn't it already been implemented at some point over the last 232 years - what are the drawbacks that have overridden previous efforts?

Certainly the numbers have already been crunched, but would like to be reminded of what this kind of program would cost in terms of additional tax burden to all - be the burden in the form of increased income or sales taxes.

Heck, if UHC would cost less than the water park tax - I'm there! :-)

-- Posted by fxpwt on Wed, Sep 3, 2008, 9:03 pm CDT

Finally the truth comes out! We need a solution, and the time is now. Who has our best interest at heart on this matter? McCain or Obama?

The fact is only "one" party is touting health care for all, and it's NOT the republicons! Vote Democrat! Your life just may depend on it!

-- Posted by The_Doctor on Wed, Sep 3, 2008, 6:39 pm CDT

I am in that situation now. I had cancer, and can't get health insurance until 2010. My insurqnce I am on now ends in a couple months. What am i to do? I guess I will quit going to the doctors for follow-up.

-- Posted by daffyduck2 on Wed, Sep 3, 2008, 6:03 pm CDT

I pay $158 per WEEK (roughly $7000 per year) from my paycheck to have family health insurance. Who cares about taxes, people need help on this issue. Does John McCain have a solution, or is he adressing this issue? Oboma at least talks about lowering it. I will soon have to cancel my insurance due to affordability.

-- Posted by JustUs on Wed, Sep 3, 2008, 12:14 pm CDT

The $10 billion dollars monthly spent in Iraq could afford health care to all Americans for 20 years or more. Our priorities are out of whack and no one seems to care.

-- Posted by dexterite on Wed, Sep 3, 2008, 12:08 pm CDT

Medicaid is great for uninsured adults if you make less than $284 a month. for those that actually make an attempt and have to work to survive and are not offered health insurance or cant afford private insurance you have nothing! In this case the government is rewarding those that stay at home and sit on their tails and dont work! I know there is a diffence for those that are disabled, but I am talking about those that fall in the low income *but still employed* but no access to insurance class!

-- Posted by amazed on Wed, Sep 3, 2008, 11:45 am CDT



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