EVEN AS our government puts members of our armed services in harm's way, it is failing to care for them once they return home. Soldiers get excellent acute care when injured on active duty, but as revelations of poor conditions for soldiers receiving ongoing outpatient care at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center highlighted, service members often have trouble getting the care they need once active duty ends.
According to a study by some of my colleagues at Harvard Medical School, to be published in next month's American Journal of Public Health, nearly 1.8 million veterans had no health insurance in 2004, up 290,000 since 2000. An additional 3.8 million members of their households were also uninsured and ineligible for care at hospitals and clinics run by the Veterans Health Administration of the Department of Veterans Affairs. The 2006 data released this year show little change in these numbers.
Many uninsured veterans are barred from VA care because of a 2003 Bush administration order that halted enrollment of most middle-income veterans. Others are unable to obtain VA care because of unaffordable copayments for VA specialty care, waiting lists at some facilities or the lack of VA facilities in their communities. Almost two-thirds of uninsured veterans were employed, and nearly 9 out of 10 had worked within the past year. Most uninsured veterans were in working families. Many earned too little to afford health insurance, but too much to qualify for free care under Medicaid or VA rules.
The problems with veterans' healthcare offer further evidence of why the US healthcare system needs to be reformed. Because we pay for healthcare through a patchwork of private insurance companies, nearly one-third of our health spending goes to administration. Replacing private insurers with national health insurance would recover money currently squandered on billing, marketing, underwriting, and other activities. Eliminating this waste has been estimated to save $350 billion per year. Combined with what we're already spending, this is enough to provide comprehensive coverage for everyone.
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)


No comments:
Post a Comment