Literature DB >> 29971325

Association of Out-of-Pocket Annual Health Expenditures With Financial Hardship in Low-Income Adults With Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease in the United States.

Rohan Khera1, Javier Valero-Elizondo2, Victor Okunrintemi2, Anshul Saxena2, Sandeep R Das1, James A de Lemos1, Harlan M Krumholz3,4,5, Khurram Nasir4,5.   

Abstract

Importance: Health insurance is effective in preventing financial hardship from unexpected major health care events. However, it is also essential to assess whether vulnerable patients, particularly those from low-income families, are adequately protected from longitudinal health care costs for common chronic conditions such as atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). Objective: To examine the annual burden of total out-of-pocket health expenses among low-income families that included a member with ASCVD. Design, Setting, and Participants: In this cross-sectional study of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey from January 2006 through December 2015, all families with 1 or more members with ASCVD were identified. Families were classified as low income if they had an income under 200% of the federal poverty limit. Analyses began December 2017. Main Outcomes and Measures: Total annual inflation-adjusted out-of-pocket expenses, inclusive of insurance premiums, for all patients with ASCVD. We compared these expenses against annual family incomes. Out-of-pocket expenses of more than 20% and more than 40% of family income defined high and catastrophic financial burden, respectively.
Results: We identified 22 521 adults with ASCVD, represented in 20 600 families in the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. They correspond to an annual estimated 23 million or 9.9% of US adults with a mean (SE) age of 65 (0.2) years and included 10.9 million women (47.1%). They were represented in 21 million or 15% of US families. Of these, 8.2 million families (39%) were low income. The mean annual family income was $57 143 (95% CI, $55 377-$58 909), and the mean out-of-pocket expense was $4415 (95% CI, $3735-$3976). While financial burden from health expenses decreased throughout the study, even in 2014 and 2015, low-income families had 3-fold higher odds than mid/high-income families of high financial burden (21.4% vs 7.6%; OR, 3.31; 95% CI, 2.55-4.31) and 9-fold higher odds of catastrophic financial burden (9.8% vs 1.2%; OR, 9.35; 95% CI, 5.39-16.20), representing nearly 2 million low-income families nationally. Further, even among the insured, 1.6 million low-income families (21.8%) experienced high financial burden and 721 000 low-income families (9.8%) experienced catastrophic out-of-pocket health care expenses in 2014 and 2015. Conclusions and Relevance: One in 4 low-income families with a member with ASCVD, including those with insurance coverage, experience a high financial burden, and 1 in 10 experience a catastrophic financial burden due to cumulative out-of-pocket health care expenses. To alleviate economic disparities, policy interventions must extend focus to improving not only access, but also quality of coverage, particularly for low-income families.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29971325      PMCID: PMC6143078          DOI: 10.1001/jamacardio.2018.1813

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA Cardiol            Impact factor:   14.676


  38 in total

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2.  Financial burden of health care, 2001-2004.

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4.  With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility: Big Data Research From the National Inpatient Sample.

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7.  Financial barriers to health care and outcomes after acute myocardial infarction.

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8.  Negative wealth shock and short-term changes in depressive symptoms and medication adherence among late middle-aged adults.

Authors:  Lindsay R Pool; Belinda L Needham; Sarah A Burgard; Michael R Elliott; Carlos F Mendes de Leon
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9.  Association of a Negative Wealth Shock With All-Cause Mortality in Middle-aged and Older Adults in the United States.

Authors:  Lindsay R Pool; Sarah A Burgard; Belinda L Needham; Michael R Elliott; Kenneth M Langa; Carlos F Mendes de Leon
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10.  Free Care Is Not Enough: Barriers to Attending Free Clinic Visits in a Sample of Uninsured Individuals with Diabetes.

Authors:  Jennifer A Mallow; Laurie A Theeke; Emily R Barnes; Tara Whetsel; Brian K Mallow
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  24 in total

1.  Economic Dimensions of Health Inequities: The Role of Implementation Research.

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2.  Association of Depression Risk with Patient Experience, Healthcare Expenditure, and Health Resource Utilization Among Adults with Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease.

Authors:  Victor Okunrintemi; Javier Valero-Elizondo; Erin D Michos; Joseph A Salami; Oluseye Ogunmoroti; Chukwuemeka Osondu; Martin Tibuakuu; Eve-Marie Benson; Timothy M Pawlik; Michael J Blaha; Khurram Nasir
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3.  Home Blood Pressure Monitoring in Cases of Clinical Uncertainty to Differentiate Appropriate Inaction From Therapeutic Inertia.

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Review 4.  The Business Case for Population Health Management.

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5.  Gender Differences in the Relationship Between Financial Stress and Metabolic Abnormalities.

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6.  What Factors Are Associated with Increased Financial Burden and High Financial Worry For Patients Undergoing Common Hand Procedures?

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7.  Catastrophic Health Expenditures With Pregnancy and Delivery in the United States.

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8.  Inequalities and Deteriorations in Cardiovascular Health in Premenopausal US Women, 1990-2016.

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9.  Out-of-Pocket Payment for Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring Among Commercially Insured in the United States.

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10.  A cross-sectional study of financial distress in persons with multimorbidity.

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