Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Survey Gives Low Grade To U.S. Health Care

The bad economy has led nearly 25% of consumers to delay medical care because they couldn't afford it or didn't have insurance, according to a new survey.

It gets worse: Forty percent of Americans give the U.S. health care system a grade of D or F, according to the report, released today by the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions. It polled more than 4,000 Americans age 18 and over. Sixteen percent of respondents say they've been forced to switch doctors, with a quarter of the switches due to cost. Seventeen percent of enrollees switched heathcare plans last year, with more than a quarter of them seeking a lower cost plan.

That all adds up to a case for healthcare reform, say the authors at Deloitte. Americans are caught in a web of multiple medications, chronic conditions, and the high costs that come with them.

"The current economic climate is taking a toll on American consumers prompting them to increasingly make decisions about health care that are married to their pocketbooks," said Paul H. Keckley, Ph.D., executive director, Deloitte Center for Health Solutions. "The time for health care reform could not be more pressing."

source

the survey

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