8110753457?profile=originalNow we know: Rejecting the Medicaid expansion could kill nearly 6,000 people each year.

May 07, 2014

Like many other liberal health-policy wonks, I’ve written a lot about the value of health reform in improving access to preventive care, protecting people against crippling medical debt and improving people’s physical and mental health.

I haven’t written much about how better access to health care can actually save lives. The argument for the Affordable Care Act, President Obama’s signature health-care-law, doesn’t ride on this. Moreover, the connection between health insurance and mortality is really hard to pin down, even if insurance truly has strong protective effects. The uninsured in America are mainly non-elderly adults. Deaths are really rare in this population, on the order of 0.4 percent per year. according to an Urban Institute study. Real-world randomized clinical trials—even those with thousands of patients—are just too small and too brief to reliably determine how much we might reduce mortality by extending coverage to the uninsured.
On Monday, though, a beautiful study was published in Annals of Internal Medicine that provides some of the best data we have connecting health coverage to saved lives. It’s changed my thinking, too. I’m more confident than I was last week that the ACA will save many thousands of lives every year.

Ironically, the study examined the impact of the bipartisan insurance expansion enacted in Massachusetts in 2006—a.k.a. “RomneyCare,” which provided the basic model for the ACA. Three of the best researchers in the business—Benjamin Sommers, Sharon Long and Katherine Baicker examined a decade’s worth of mortality data in Massachusetts counties, comparing trends to those found in carefully chosen comparison counties in other states. This wasn’t a randomized trial, but it was the next best thing, tracking the experiences of hundreds of thousands of people for years before and after the enactment of Massachusetts’ reforms.

Here’s their bottom-line result: Insurance coverage reduced mortality rates by about 30 percent. For every 830 people newly insured, Massachusetts prevented one death per year.

The sheer craftsmanship of this study makes it a pleasure to read (at least, if you’re a health wonk like me). It includes several smart checks to rule out potential biases. For example, Sommers, Long and Baicker show that mortality rates among elderly Massachusetts residents were basically unaffected by the 2006 reforms—which makes sense because almost everyone in this group was already insured through Medicare. The authors also demonstrate especially strong mortality reductions for conditions that are actually amenable to medical intervention, such as strokes.

Do these results generalize to the national expansion of coverage under the Affordable Care Act? Nobody really knows. Massachusetts has done a better and more enthusiastic job implementing RomneyCare than many states (and the federal government) have done thus far with ACA.

On the other hand, Massachusetts experienced the strongest survival benefits in low-income areas that contain many uninsured people. These counties look more like those in less-prosperous states most affected by health reform. Massachusetts began its reform as a prosperous liberal state with effective public health polices and a strong infrastructure of safety-net care. Other states are starting with a much less favorable baseline, and thus hold more dramatic possibilities for improvement. A state like Kentucky, which just provided coverage for the first time to hundreds of thousands of very poor people, might well see larger effects.

One thing is for sure. If anything close to these results apply, the ACA is saving many lives every year. The new law is projected to cover more than 20 million adults who would otherwise go uninsured. The Massachusetts estimates imply that the ACA will prevent something in the neighborhood of 24,096 deaths every year (simply: 20 million divided by 830). That’s more than twice the number of Americans killed in gun homicides. It’s considerably more than the number of Americans who die from HIV/AIDS.

About the Author:

Harold Pollack teaches social service administration at the University of Chicago. A fellow of the Century Foundation, he’s a regular contributor to the Washington Post’s Wonkblog section and to healthinsurance.org.  

Read more: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/05/the-deadliest-republican-policy-yet-106453.html#ixzz3163iTpVM

You need to be a member of Ashtar Command - Spiritual Community to add comments!

Join Ashtar Command - Spiritual Community

Email me when people reply –

Replies

  • Repubs coined the term, Obamacare, but it was their obstructionism that prevented anything better.  As lousy as the bill is, it does manage to make healthcare possible for about 30 million people who wouldn't have any otherwise and that is a step in the right direction, at least.  Raw greed on the part of parasitic insurance corps and politicians is the only reason everyone doesn't have the same full and free coverage that congress gives to themselves.  Am I lying? 

    • Nope, my friend, you are not lying! If 'they' truly cared about the American public they would have tried to make the bill better but no, that was not part of their agenda...their agenda is to get rid of Obama and blame him for everything they refuse to do to help Americans...useless!

This reply was deleted.

Topics by Tags

Monthly Archives

Latest Activity

Love & Joy posted a discussion
 The Medicine of Joy  What if laughter itself was medicine? Not just a quick distraction, but a way to shift the whole energy of a moment. Let us give you an example out of our daily life. We will never forget one of our first nights in the house we…
3 hours ago
AlternateEarth posted a blog post
 KaliArticleTalkReadView sourceView historyTools  From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article is about the form of Mahadevi. For the Supreme goddess of time and death, see Mahakali. For the auspicious form of the goddess, see Bhadrakali. For…
6 hours ago
AlternateEarth posted a blog post
  41  0 Read Time:14 Minute, 39 SecondIrish Goddess, the Mórrígan —When we look at Irish mythology, it is the Morrigan whose name appears most often… but she is also perhaps the most misunderstood of the ‘Celtic’ Gods and Goddesses. She is of the…
6 hours ago
AlternateEarth left a comment on Comment Wall
"Germany;
4 AfD Candidates Have Died Suddenly Before Key State Election
https://www.infowars.com/posts/4-afd-candidates-have-died-suddenly-..."
10 hours ago
rev.joshua skirvin posted a blog post
 Greetings in the Light and Love of our Infinite Creator.We enjoy the moments we share with all of you. Thank you for this Transmission.The Force of Light surrounds you completely, resonating within the very core of your being. You are spirit, a…
12 hours ago
Edward posted a status
Galactic Federation
14 hours ago
Love & Joy posted a discussion
  Decree For Living By Steven HutchinsonI Am my Divine Presence residing in my Divine Center Point in every now moment, and Divinely Breathing with God's Great Compassionate Light, and Witnessing Mother God's Presence Enveloping me in Every Now…
14 hours ago
AlternateEarth left a comment on Comment Wall
"Top Labour MP Bridget Phillipson admitted during a recent Sky News interview that she believes the rights of “asylum seekers” are more important than the rights of her own constituents.…"
yesterday
More…