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Patients are Staying Away From Health Care in Droves
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Amednews.com REPORTS HERE that "Patients are putting off seeing a doctor, often because of cost. Deloitte Center for Health Solutions in August released the latest numbers reaching that conclusion. According to those findings, 79% of 4,008 patients surveyed visited a physician or health professional in the previous year, down from 85% in 2009. Among those without insurance, 74% -- up from 70% in 2009 -- said cost was the main reason for skipping care. Overall, 40% of respondents said they delayed care because of cost, up from 38% in 2009."

"The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Health Statistics said 15.4% of Americans were uninsured at one time in 2009, and major health plans have reported declining membership, as businesses stopped offering coverage or have laid off employees. 90% of physicians say patients express concern about paying for care."

"The Deloitte survey found that the percentage of patients who decided not to see a doctor when they were sick or injured actually declined, going down to 20% in the 2010 survey from 25% in 2009. However, cost was more frequently cited as a reason for people not to visit a physician, particularly for those without insurance. Deloitte said 74% of those uninsured gave cost as the main reason for skipping care, up from 70% in 2009."

"Insurers are noticing their members cutting down trips to the doctor....'We are seeing it everywhere, in every segment of the business at this time,' Aetna President Mark Bertolini told analysts during the company's second-quarter earnings call. "There are a number of impacts, but the economy does definitely have an impact here.'"

"Deloitte's findings echo those from a survey by BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina released in October 2009, and one by the American Academy of Family Physicians in May 2009. The North Carolina survey found that 15% to 17% of those surveyed were skipping routine checkups and preventive care, specialist visits and recommended treatments. Twice as many were taking fewer prescriptions, skipping prescription doses or not filling prescriptions because of cost."

"Ninety percent of the physicians who responded in the AAFP survey said their patients were expressing concerns about their ability to pay for care."

 
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U.S. government overpaid private insurance companies administering Medicare Advantage plans by as much as $3.1 billion in 2010, according to a new report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO).

About a quarter of all Medicare beneficiaries are enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) paid about $114 billion to the plans in 2010.


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