Donate
Email Password
Not a member? Sign Up   Forgot password?
Business and Economics Education Environment Health Care California
Home
About PRI
My PRI
Contact
Search
Policy Research Areas
Events
Publications
Press Room
PRI Blog
Jobs Internships
Scholars
Staff
Book Store
Policy Cast
Upcoming Events
Public Pension Tsunami: Closer to the Shore?
5.17.2012 12:00:00 PM
Public Pension Panel 
More

Benjamin Rush Society Debate: UCSD
5.17.2012 3:00:00 PM
UCSD Benjamin Rush Society 
More

Should City Hall Go Bankrupt?
5.30.2012 12:00:00 PM
A CalWatchdog Series on Municipal Bankruptcy 
More

Recent Events
Benjamin Rush Society Debate: Harvard Medical School, May 3, 2012
5.3.2012 5:45:00 PM

Harvard Bejamin Rush Society Debate

 More

Sally Pipes and Dennis Prager
5.2.2012 6:00:00 PM

Why the World Needs American Values

 More

Luncheon and Book Launch Featuring John Stossel
4.20.2012 12:00:00 PM
The City Club of San Francisco More

Opinion Journal Federation
Town Hall silver partner
Lawsuit abuse victims project
Blog RSS Archive
E-mail Print The Uninsured Are Not Causing the ER "Crisis"


By: John R. Graham
4.9.2008

But don't take it from me: ER Docs say so, too.

 

When it comes to arguments for "universal" health care in America, the hardest myth to kill seems to be the one that goes like this: "Uninsured people do not have access to primary care physicians. Therefore, they wait until their symptoms are severe, then go to the ER, and don't pay their bills.  Hospitals suffer financial distress and health costs spiral up."

I (and others more clever than me) have debunked this thoroughly, in my analysis of ABX1 1, the California Health Care Deforminator proposed by Governor Schwarzenegger and Assembly Speaker Nuñez last year.  Nevertheless, the good folks at the New America Foundation (who fed Schwarzenegger this line) have never recanted their erroneous estimate of the so-called "hidden tax" that the uninsured impose on the insured through cost-shifting by hospitals (although they now seem to be trying to dodge responsibility for the idea by claiming that the governor thought it up).

Now comes along a new study published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine, the official journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians, which compares ER visits from 1996 to 2004.  Guess what?

 

  • The proportion of ER visits by uninsured patients declined from 15.5% to 14.5% of all ER visits;
  • The proportion of ER visits by patients who had a relationship with a primary care physician increased from 52.4% to 59.0% of all ER visits; and
  • The proportion of ER visits by patients in households earning 400% or more of the Federal Poverty Level increased from 21.9% to 29.0% of all ER visits.

So, not only do we not have a crisis, the non-crisis itself is fading away, and, if anything, we are facing a developing potential crisis amongst higher income, insured patients!

The U.S does not need "universal" health insurance; it needs to fix the health insurance that already exists, through competition and individual choice.




 

Submit to: 
Submit to: Digg Submit to: Del.icio.us Submit to: Facebook Submit to: StumbleUpon Submit to: Newsvine Submit to: Reddit
Browse by
Recent Publications
Blog Archive
Powered by eResources