you are here: iVillage iVillage's message boards In the News  / Breaking News Stories  / 

In the News

127831 messages posted to this board • 7 messages posted today
find messages about   
welcome!
 
discussion title:
 

Hospitalized Children Without Insurance

emoticon:
 emoticon
message #:
  16307.1
replies:
  18
from:
  libraone  Member Icon
date:
  Oct-31 10:30 am

Hospitalized Children Without Insurance Are More Likely to Die, a Study Finds

Complete article at link.......

http://prescriptions.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/10/30/lacking-insurance-hospitalized-children-more-likely-to-die/?hpw

Uninsured children who wind up in the hospital are much more likely to die than children covered by either private or government insurance plans, according to one of the first studies to assess the impact of insurance coverage on hospitalized children.

Researchers at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center analyzed data from more than 23 million children’s hospitalizations in 37 states from 1988 to 2005. Compared with insured children, uninsured children faced a 60 percent increased risk of dying, the researchers found.

The authors estimated that at least 1,000 hospitalized children died each year simply because they lacked insurance, accounting for 16,787 of some 38,649 children’s deaths nationwide during the period analyzed.

Harvard Medical Study Links Lack of Insurance to 45,000 U.S. Deaths a Year

Complete article at link.......

http://prescriptions.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/17/harvard-medical-study-links-lack-of-insurance-to-45000-us-deaths-a-year/

As the White House and Congress continue debating how best to provide coverage to tens of millions of Americans currently without health insurance, a new study (PDF) is meant to offer a stark reminder of why lawmakers should continue to try. Researchers from Harvard Medical School say the lack of coverage can be tied to about 45,000 deaths a year in the United States — a toll that is greater than the number of people who die each year from kidney disease.

 

Photobucket      The WeatherPixie Patriot
discussion title:
 

Hospitalized Children Without Insurance

emoticon:
 emoticon
message #:
  16307.2 in response to 16307.1
replies:
  18
from:
  ddnlj  Member Icon
to:
  libraone  Member Icon
date:
  Nov-2 9:11 am

You know my stand on the healthcare issue, but for a moment I'm going to question statistics. Last week's debate here on this topic made me realize that numbers without any 'meat' on them don't mean much.

What we need are in-depth articles about these 45,000 people a year who die. Maybe there are some and I've missed them, but simply stating X number doesn't tell the whole story. Who, where, when, how and why?  With the right research it couldn't be that hard to flesh out these statistics and give them more validity. I'm not questioning the numbers, but even I would like to know what's behind them.

discussion title:
 

Hospitalized Children Without Insurance

emoticon:
 emoticon
message #:
  16307.3 in response to 16307.2
replies:
  18
from:
  libraone  Member Icon
to:
  ddnlj  Member Icon
date:
  Nov-2 9:23 am

There's a link to a PDF file provided in the body of the article. Here I'll post the link......

http://pnhp.org/excessdeaths/health-insurance-and-mortality-in-US-adults.pdf

See the graph on page three if you don't have time to read the entire thing. :)

Photobucket      The WeatherPixie Patriot
discussion title:
 

Hospitalized Children Without Insurance

emoticon:
 emoticon
message #:
  16307.4 in response to 16307.3
replies:
  18
from:
  ddnlj  Member Icon
to:
  libraone  Member Icon
date:
  Nov-2 10:07 am

Excellent find, Libra!   I wonder why we don't see articles like this in more publicly accessed mediums. Why not in the Time Magazine or USA Today?  The average American doesn't read the American Journal of Public Health.  This is the kind of information that we all need to know about.
discussion title:
 

Hospitalized Children Without Insurance

emoticon:
 emoticon
message #:
  16307.5 in response to 16307.1
replies:
  18
from:
  jeanwl  Member Icon
to:
  libraone  Member Icon
date:
  Nov-2 2:24 pm

I don't find the results at all surprising. People without insurance don't get medical coverage unless it's through an ER which, generally, can't turn them away, but by then it can be too late.  I've heard some on this board propose that people who don't have insurance use the ERs and then not pay but that doesn't seem like a viable alternative as shown by these studies.  Our society so far has deemed that people w/out insurance don't deserve the same level of health as people with insurance. 

McCain's advisor will soon find himself w/out insurance and has a "preexisting" condition which may prevent him from getting any.  What goes around, comes around.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/01/AR2009110102121.html

Republican adviser faces health care's costly bite
Former McCain strategist is about to lose his health insurance

By Philip Rucker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, November 2, 2009

If history had taken a different course, Doug Holtz-Eakin would be inside the McCain White House driving the Republican president's domestic agenda, including health-care reform. But now, one year after Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) lost the presidential election, the man who was by McCain's side as the campaign's top health-care guru remains unemployed -- and his COBRA health coverage is running out.

Irony of ironies, it gets worse. Holtz-Eakin, who is about to start shopping for insurance on the individual market, is 51. And he has one of those pesky "preexisting conditions" that insurance companies often cite in denying coverage.

"A right renal autotransplant," he said, pointing to his abdomen as he described the 1990 transplant surgery he went through after one of his kidneys was damaged in an accident. "They got rid of the artery, moved my kidney and rebuilt me for the 21st century. If you look at my file, any insurance company would go, 'Hmm . . .' "

Good luck.

Holtz-Eakin unraveled his woes in an interview one recent afternoon from the seventh floor of an office building on Constitution Avenue NW. Across the street was the U.S. Capitol and the stately committee rooms where Holtz-Eakin frequently testified as director of the Congressional Budget Office (2003-05). Sixteen blocks up Pennsylvania Avenue was the West Wing, where he briefed President George W. Bush and his aides as chief economist for the Council of Economic Advisers (2001-02).

But on this day, Holtz-Eakin was in a windowless office that he is temporarily occupying so he has someplace other than Starbucks to work on his laptop. On the walls of his sublet space were someone else's Ohio State University seal and someone else's beach scene prints.

"This is some guy's office. I don't know who he is," Holtz-Eakin said, turning in his swivel chair to the bookshelf. "These are his books."

At the end of the 2008 presidential campaign, when Holtz-Eakin flew home from Arizona for the final time, his job was finished. His BlackBerry stopped buzzing. Reporters stopped calling. He stared out the window of his 23rd-floor apartment in Arlington and realized, suddenly, that he had all the free time in the world.

Since then, he's kept busy offering advice, paid and pro-bono, to politicians, and writing articles, giving speeches and making appearances on cable television about health care and economic policy.

"My mother's deeply concerned that I don't have a job," joked Holtz-Eakin, a divorced father of two grown children.

Holtz-Eakin said he's been paying about $1,000 a month to extend the private health insurance he received on McCain's campaign through the government's COBRA program, but that will expire in a few months. This is the first time in his life he has not had employer-provided health coverage. "I worry about where I go next in the way many Americans do," he said.

But although Holtz-Eakin dresses the part -- on this day he wore a gray pinstripe suit, white shirt with cuff links and a powder-blue tie -- he is in no hurry to find full-time work. He said he'll get a job when he's ready, even if it means buying an individual health insurance plan at an exorbitant premium.

"Let's not whine too much about me," he said. "I'm a wealthy, affluent American in the big picture."

Despite his personal trials, however, Holtz-Eakin said his conviction on the hot-button issue of health care is unchanged. He believes that reform is needed, but that President Obama and congressional Democrats are going about it the wrong way. The system is "broken," he said, but the bills now before Congress do not cut costs enough. On the campaign trail, Holtz-Eakin promoted McCain's plan to eliminate the tax exemption for employer-sponsored health insurance and give tax credits to individuals to buy their own coverage.

Of the bills moving through Congress, Holtz-Eakin said: "I wish the policies were different, and I wish I could've somehow gotten us to a bipartisan place. I think McCain had the capacity to do that.

"But the reality is what it is," he continued. "You can't live your life in the land of what might have been."

 




 
Change the number of messages
displayed on this page in
Indicate your interest in the discussion
   
Get updates to this discussion
delivered by email