Find Solutions for California’s Overcrowded Emergency Rooms: Don’t Blame the Victims, the Uninsured
[courtesy of California Progress Report]
By Anthony Wright
Executive Director of Health Access California
"Don't Blame Crowded ERs on the Uninsured" is the pitch-perfect headline of an article by Suzanne Bohan in the San Mateo County Times and other papers.
The articles reports on a UC-San Francisco study that reports that asks "Are the Uninsured Responsible for the Increase in Emergency Department Visits in the United States?" and answers "no." In fact, the "proportion of adult ED visits by persons without insurance was stable across the decade," roughly in the 14-15% range.
Despite the belief that the uninsured are the majority of those crowded in our emergency rooms, I note that this figure is a bit lower than the overall percentage of uninsured people in the country, which is around 16%.
This is consistent with other findings, such as a 2004 Urban Institute report by researchers Zuckerman and Shen on occasional and frequent ER users. That paper concludes, in part, "The uninsured and the privately insured adults have the same risk of being frequent users... It seems hard to blame the overcrowding of EDs on the uninsured."
DON'T TAKE THE WRONG MESSAGE: Some conservative commentators will use this research to attack the notion that of a "hidden tax" that we all pay in our premiums for having such a large uninsured population, and to attack the notion of health reforms and coverage expansion generally. I agree with part of the critique, but get very different lessons.
I too have been a skeptic of the Governor Schwarzenegger's "hidden tax" rhetoric, because it led people to blame the uninsured for high health costs, rather than the reverse.
If the uninsured go to the emergency room, they have only a right to be stabilized. And even then, they get a bill--typically the biggest bill they will see in their lives, and often one that is inflated well above what an insurer would pay for the same service. No wonder they may actually go to the ER less.
LOTS OF FACTORS: That said, there's nothing inconsistent with saying that the uninsured, when they finally do go to get care, are in a worse condition since they let their conditions linger and mestaticize, costing the health system more money in the long run. Or that the uninsured get the bill, but many face bankruptcy not being able to pay, and also leaving the hospital unpaid.
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