Report Finds Lack of Insurance Is Linked to Higher Death Rates
By Anna Boyd
14:57, April 7th 2008
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Report Finds Lack of Insurance Is Linked to Higher Death Rates

A report issued Friday by Families USA, the national organization for health care consumers, concludes that nearly three people die each day in North Carolina because they don’t have health insurance.

The Families USA report says people without health insurance are more likely to delay seeking care because of the high bills, which means disease such as cancer are diagnosed at a later, more deadly stage.

“Our report highlights how our inadequate system of health coverage condemns a great number of North Carolinians to an early death, simply because they don’t have the same access to health care as their insured neighbors. The conclusions are sadly clear - a lack of health coverage is a matter of life and death for many North Carolinians. Health insurance really matters in how people make their health care decisions. We know that people without insurance often forgo checkups, screenings and other preventive care,” Ron Pollack, Executive Director of Families USA said quoted by Medical News Today.

The Families USA report comes three years after a study by the National Institute of Medicine found that nearly 18,000 deaths are linked to lack of insurance annually. In fact, the Families USA findings are based on data previously compiled and analyzed by the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan research group.

According to the Institute of Medicine, uninsured adults are 25 percent more likely to die prematurely than adults with private health insurance.

The report is “a wake-up call” as Connecticut Democratic U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro named it. Moreover, it highlights the idea that the government should do something to help people who lack health insurance so they weren’t exposed to such health threats. Unfortunately, this is a very hard goal to achieve, according to U.S. Rep David Price (D-NC).

“Finding a way to achieve universal coverage should be one of our nation’s top priorities. But we in Congress are still facing a White House roadback even with our bipartisan effort to expand health care for needy children. We are well past partisanship on this issue. The President and his backers need to get with the program and support children’s health care and other efforts to get Americans Insured,” Price said.



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