Medicaid strains ER more than uninsured
July 11th, 2008 | by Brian Schwartz |
A common rationale for compulsory insurance is that the uninsured get their medical care from emergency rooms for free, and pass on the cost to the insured. I debunked this reasoning in an earlier post. Yet, for those who do not agree with my critique (if you don’t agree, please tell me why!), then this cost-shift rationale could justify scrapping Medicaid. Or at least replacing it with subsidies for private insurance (analagous to food stamps) or tax-credits for donations to worthwhile charities. Why? Check out this Reuters story:
The government’s Medicaid program for the poor may put more financial burden on overcrowded hospital emergency rooms than the nation’s 47 million uninsured, according to a study published on Thursday.
Researchers at the University of California San Francisco and Stanford University found that the uninsured patients paid 35 percent of their overall emergency room bills in 2004, versus 33 percent for Medicaid.
“What surprised us was that uninsured patients actually pay a higher proportion of their emergency department charges than Medicaid does,” said Renee Hsia, an emergency room doctor and researcher at UCSF who led the study.
“This runs counter to the widespread impression that the uninsured are universally poor payers,” said Hsia, who noted that the ranks of uninsured include healthy young people who are employed full-time.
(via Health Care BS)
tags: cost-shift, Medicaid, uninsured
One Response to “Medicaid strains ER more than uninsured”
By jim on Jul 12, 2008 | Reply
the picture has changed in 2008…the federal government reduced the number of patients covered under medicaid through the deficit reduction act,IRS and patient advocacy groups have promoted charity care over medicaid coverage and hospitals find it easier to process a charity case ( and get reimbursed) then to get someone covered on medicaid…so where do you think the uninsured in 2008 are going?..