Millions can't afford health insurance
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| Tue, 07-21-2009 - 11:32pm |
http://news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20090721/hl_hsn/millionsinuscantaffordhealthinsurance
TUESDAY, July 21 (HealthDay News) -- Most people in the United States who try to buy an individual health insurance policy on their own never end up getting coverage, often because the premiums are just too expensive, according to a new study.
A report by the Commonwealth Fund, a private foundation that supports independent research on health policy reform, found that roughly three of every four people who tried to buy a policy from the individual health insurance market in the past three years didn't get one. The main reason cited was premium cost. About 57 percent said it was very hard or even impossible to find coverage they could afford.
About 47 percent of the people surveyed said it was difficult or impossible to find a plan with the coverage they needed, and 36 percent reported being charged more or denied coverage because of a pre-existing condition or had the condition excluded from their coverage.
Called "Failure to Protect: Why the Individual Insurance Market Is Not a Viable Option for Most U.S. Families," the report compared the experiences of working-age adults with individual- and employer-based private health insurance.
It also found that people who bought health insurance in the individual market spend a lot more on premiums and deductibles than those with employer-based coverage.
The survey found that among U.S. adults with individual insurance, 64 percent spend $3,000 or more annually on premiums, whereas just 20 percent of those with employer-based insurance spend that much. Out-of-pocket expenses, including premiums, averaged $6,750 for people with individual market insurance, compared with $2,250 for those with employer-based plans.
"In our current system, millions of people without access to employer coverage have no affordable option for health insurance," said Karen Davis, president of the Commonwealth Fund. "To achieve a health-care system that works for all Americans, we need health-care reform that offers comprehensive, affordable health insurance to everyone regardless of their health status, premium subsidies to help families with low and moderate incomes afford health insurance, and requirements to ensure that no one is denied health insurance because of a health problem."

Yes, we most certainly do need reform! But there are those who defend Ins companies right to deny those with pre-exhisting conditions! They defend them tooth and nail. Most likely, because they are shareholders, have decent low cost or no cost from their Employer Based Health Ins, or they
Sometimes we feel more comfortable with the devil we know than the one who's a stranger.
I don't like the bill at all. We don't need more insurance, private or public. We need accessible, affordable, quality health care. We don't have it now, we won't have it with the bill as it now stands. Instead we'll have another institution needlessly muddying the waters and charging for so doing. Makes NO sense whatsoever.
Yes, there are probably some like DeMint who obviously want Obama to fail. But am guessing that far more are troubled by the cost of change, particularly with a struggling economy and high jobless rates. At another time, health care reform might have been welcomed more readily.
BTW, please don't fall into the trap of assuming it's illegals who are straining the costs of the system. That's just hate mongering and finger pointing by bigots. We are a nation of immigrants. Behooves us all to remember that rather than acting greedy or fearful.
Read that you're on the frontlines now in the war on cancer. I sincerely hope that you have a steadfast support team and experienced compassionate care; and you're in my thoughts and prayers.
Jabberwocka