Financial Barriers to Medical Care: A Prospective Study in a University-Affiliated Community Clinic

Access to medical care in the United States is deteriorating, particularly for the poor. The authors evaluated patients who could not aiford medical care recommended by physicians in a university-affiliated clinic that serves a predominately indigent population. The authors determined the patients’...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of the medical sciences 1989-03, Vol.297 (3), p.158-162
Hauptverfasser: Hubbell, F. Allan, Waitzkin, Howard, Rucker, Lloyd, Akin, Barbara V., Heide, M. Gabriela
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Access to medical care in the United States is deteriorating, particularly for the poor. The authors evaluated patients who could not aiford medical care recommended by physicians in a university-affiliated clinic that serves a predominately indigent population. The authors determined the patients’ demographic characteristics, their medical problems, and the types of care for which financial barriers existed. In addition, the authors compared the patients’ demographic characteristics and medical illnesses with those of a control group of patients from the clinic who did not experience financial barriers to medical care. Of the 1,950 patients evaluated, 94 (4.8%) were unable to aiford care recommended by their physicians. Sixty-seven percent were US citizens, 73% were unemployed, 63% had monthly family incomes of less than $500, and only 33% had health insurance. The patients had a variety of medical problems, ranging from hearing loss, for which they could not obtain hearing aids, to breast masses, for which they could not obtain mammographies or biopsies. When compared to patients who did not experience financial barriers to recommended care, the study patients tended to be poorer, more likely to be undocumented, more likely to be uninsured, and less likely to have acute, self-limited illnesses. Our findings support the argument that the nation’s current piecemeal approach to providing indigent health care may lead to serious financial barriers to access in some localities.
ISSN:0002-9629
1538-2990
DOI:10.1097/00000441-198903000-00005