Explaining Medicine
  • News
  • Health & Lifestyle
    • Diet & Weight Management
    • Exercise & Fitness
    • Nutrition, Food & Recipes
    • Prevention & Wellness
  • Conditions
    • Custom1
      • Conditions A-Z
      • Procedures A-Z
      • Allergies
      • Alzheimer’s
      • Arthritis
      • Asthma
      • Blood Pressure
      • Cholesterol
      • Cancer
    • Custom2
      • Chronic Pain
      • Cold Flu
      • Depression
      • Diabetes
      • Digestion
      • Eyesight
      • Health Living
      • Healthy Kids
      • Hearing Ear
    • Custom3
      • Heart
      • HIV/AIDS
      • Infectious Disease
      • Lung Conditions
      • Menopause
      • Men’s Health
      • Mental Health
      • Migraine
      • Neurology
    • Custom4
      • Oral Health
      • Pregnancy
      • Senior Health
      • Sexual Health
      • Skin Problems
      • Sleep
      • Thyroid
      • Travel Health
      • Women’s Health
  • Medications
    • Medications
    • Supplements and Vitamins
  • Medical Dictionary
  • Health Alerts
Is It Dry Skin or Atopic Dermatitis?
Atopic Dermatitis: How to Get Enough Sleep
Atopic Dermatitis: Help for Broken Skin
Atopic Dermatitis and Food Triggers
What’s at stake as the Supreme Court hears...
Oncologists’ meetings with drug reps don’t help cancer...
Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria: What to Know
CSU: What to Wear and What to Avoid
Treatment Plan for Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria
When the Hives of CSU Don’t Go Away...
Top Posts

Explaining Medicine

  • News
  • Health & Lifestyle
    • Diet & Weight Management
    • Exercise & Fitness
    • Nutrition, Food & Recipes
    • Prevention & Wellness
  • Conditions
    • Custom1
      • Conditions A-Z
      • Procedures A-Z
      • Allergies
      • Alzheimer’s
      • Arthritis
      • Asthma
      • Blood Pressure
      • Cholesterol
      • Cancer
    • Custom2
      • Chronic Pain
      • Cold Flu
      • Depression
      • Diabetes
      • Digestion
      • Eyesight
      • Health Living
      • Healthy Kids
      • Hearing Ear
    • Custom3
      • Heart
      • HIV/AIDS
      • Infectious Disease
      • Lung Conditions
      • Menopause
      • Men’s Health
      • Mental Health
      • Migraine
      • Neurology
    • Custom4
      • Oral Health
      • Pregnancy
      • Senior Health
      • Sexual Health
      • Skin Problems
      • Sleep
      • Thyroid
      • Travel Health
      • Women’s Health
  • Medications
    • Medications
    • Supplements and Vitamins
  • Medical Dictionary
  • Health Alerts
  • News

    Uninsured Get Pushed from Hospitals Faster

    by WebMD April 1, 2019

    HealthDay Reporter

    MONDAY, April 1, 2019 (HealthDay News) — Folks who aren’t covered by private insurance are much more likely to get booted out of the hospital early, a new study finds.

    Uninsured patients were also more than twice as likely to be transferred to another hospital and 66% more likely to be discharged outright, compared with people with private insurance, the findings showed.

    People on Medicaid had nearly 20% increased odds of being transferred, but about the same odds of being discharged as those covered by private insurance, the researchers said.

    “It suggests there is a disparity in access to hospital care. Based on the insurance card in your pocket, you may have different access to different hospitals for the most standard inpatient care they offer,” said lead researcher Dr. Arjun Venkatesh. He is director of Emergency Department Quality and Safety Research and Strategy with the Yale School of Medicine.

    Since 1986, federal law has required hospitals to treat anyone who shows up at an emergency room for treatment, regardless of insurance status.

    But experts have been hearing anecdotes for some time suggesting that hospital patients with no or low-quality insurance tend to get “dumped,” either through discharge or transfer to another hospital, Venkatesh said.

    However, it’s tough to pin this down because many transfers that occur really are needed to make sure people get the care they require, he noted.

    “You really do need to get transferred if, say, you have an injury to a hand and you need a hand surgeon at another hospital,” Venkatesh said.

    So he and his research team picked pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma as three common conditions that any hospital could treat, and made their analysis even more conservative by only including hospitals that had intensive care units.

    The researchers then examined more than 215,000 emergency department visits for those lung conditions that occurred in 2015 and were logged as part of a federal database used to track emergency department care in the United States.

    The investigators found that people with private insurance had a much better chance of remaining as long as necessary in the hospital, compared with the uninsured and Medicaid patients. The association held even after the research team took into account other factors, such as patient income and the hospital’s ability to provide critical care.

    Continued

    “The insurance type they had was still very predictive of whether they would be transferred to another hospital,” Venkatesh said. “That’s just not really explicable.”

    The concern is that patients who are transferred or discharged early might not be fully healed, and their condition might suffer as a result of leaving the hospital, he explained.

    Eliot Fishman, senior director of health policy for Families USA, called the findings “upsetting,” and places the study in the context of the ongoing national debate over health care coverage for everyone. Families USA is a consumer health care advocacy group.

    “I think there’s a broader conversation that is starting to happen in the country about moving toward a more universal, more equal system of health insurance coverage,” Fishman said.

    “As inappropriate as the behavior described in this article is, I think that does feed into the conversation around moving towards a more universal platform of payment, not just for hospital services, but for medical services in general,” Fishman added.

    Venkatesh suggested that policy makers who want to change this practice could look at amending federal health care law to better structure emergency care in the United States.

    “We haven’t really said what is the kind of universal access to hospital-based care that everybody in the country should get, and how we should finance and pay for that,” Venkatesh said.

    In the meantime, federal agencies like the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services could develop regulations aimed at preventing such disparities in care, he added. These disparities also could be weighed as a factor when hospitals apply for accreditation or certification.

    The new study was published online April 1 in JAMA Internal Medicine.

    WebMD News from HealthDay

    Sources

    SOURCES: Arjun Venkatesh, M.D., director,  Emergency Department Quality and Safety Research and Strategy,  Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Conn.; Eliot Fishman, Ph.D., senior director, health policy, Families USA; April 1, 2019,JAMA Internal Medicine, online

    Copyright © 2013-2018 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

    Read the article here

    Share this Post

    Share Explaining Medicine Share Explaining Medicine

    Uninsured Get Pushed from Hospitals Faster was last modified: April 5th, 2019 by WebMD

    Related

    asthmaChronic obstructive pulmonary diseaseinsuranceMedicaid
    0 comment
    0
    Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
    WebMD

    previous post
    Study Gives New Hope to Patients With Rare Cancers
    next post
    Most Parents Want Age Limits on Football Tackling

    Related Articles

    A Dying Man’s Wish To Donate His Organs Gets Complicated

    December 26, 2016

    Nerve Root Stimulation May Help Back Pain More

    October 16, 2018

    What physicians what their patients to know: 13 more things

    February 5, 2018

    A ‘natural death’ may be preferable for many than enduring CPR

    May 29, 2023

    Annals On Call – a new podcast

    August 7, 2018

    Doctors need to learn more about nutrition

    November 25, 2018

    As Presidents Live Longer, Doctors Debate Whether To Test For Dementia

    February 17, 2017

    She talked about depression at a checkup — and got billed for two visits

    October 30, 2023

    Recent gaffes by Biden and Trump may be signs of normal aging — or may be nothing

    February 14, 2024

    Food And Drug Administration Plans Crackdown On Risky Homeopathic Remedies

    December 18, 2017

    Recent Posts

    • Is It Dry Skin or Atopic Dermatitis?

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis: How to Get Enough Sleep

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis: Help for Broken Skin

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis and Food Triggers

      April 24, 2024
    • What’s at stake as the Supreme Court hears Idaho case about abortion in emergencies

      April 23, 2024

    Keep in touch

    Facebook Twitter Google + RSS

    Recent Posts

    • Is It Dry Skin or Atopic Dermatitis?

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis: How to Get Enough Sleep

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis: Help for Broken Skin

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis and Food Triggers

      April 24, 2024
    • What’s at stake as the Supreme Court hears Idaho case about abortion in emergencies

      April 23, 2024
    • Terms of Service
    • Privacy Policy

    @2026 - Explaining Medicine. All Right Reserved.


    Back To Top
    Explaining Medicine
    Proudly powered by WordPress Theme: soledad child.