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Illness devastates uninsured Older Adults’
finances
Newswise — For the more than four million
uninsured adults in the United States
nearing retirement age, a serious illness
often spells financial disaster, according
to a recent study.
“We found that for a typical household this
costs — in lost savings — between one-third
and one-half of their total accumulated
financial assets relative to households with
similar, but insured individuals,” said lead
author Keziah Cook, a Ph.D. candidate in
economics at Northwestern University in
Evanston, Ill.
Uninsured adults who developed a major
medical problem before retirement typically
lost $4,176 more than similar insured adults
did.
In contrast, insured adults who become sick
before retirement tended to fare better than
the uninsured do financially. Near-elderly
adults with insurance who experience a major
illness do not generally experience a
decline in wealth, the analysis revealed.
The study appears online in the journal
Health Services Research.
Cook and colleagues analyzed 14 years of
data from the Health and Retirement Survey,
an ongoing survey of 22,000 Americans over
50. They focused on households with an adult
between ages 51 and 64 who had recently
received a diagnosis of a major medical
problem, such as cancer, diabetes, heart or
lung disease, stroke or emotional or
psychiatric disorders.
The analysis examined changes in non-housing
wealth only, such as checking and savings
accounts, CDs and stocks and bonds, and did
not include housing equity.
“Newly ill people without insurance do
suffer large asset loss,” said Bruce
Kinosian, M.D., an associate professor of
general medicine and a geriatrician at the
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania
in Philadelphia.
However, Kinosian said that the authors’
findings on asset changes in the insured
might be less reliable, in part because they
did not consider nonmedical direct expenses
that might occur after a new illness, such
as lost wages or job loss.
The findings suggest that the existing
private health insurance system in the
United States is sufficient to protect the
financial assets of people nearing
retirement age and that expanding the
current health care system could help
protect the assets of all Americans,
according to the authors. However, it is not
clear whether expanding access is
“achievable or affordable,” they said.
“Until such reforms are implemented,
millions of Americans are potentially one
illness away from financial catastrophe,”
Cook and colleagues concluded.
Health Services Research is the official
journal of the AcademyHealth and is
published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. on
behalf of the Health Research and
Educational Trust.
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