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March
10 - Increasing Income Support to Poor Elderly Might Improve
Health
A modest boost in financial support to the elderly poor might
reduce old-age disability and be a good investment in public
health, according to a large-scale, nationwide study.
“There’s a lot of research that shows that poverty
is bad for your health. So, if we increase people’s
income through income support policies, hopefully those policies
will also lead to health improvements,” said lead author
Pamela Herd, a professor of sociology at the University of
Wisconsin.
The researchers analyzed census data between 1990 and 2000,
focusing on single adults 65 and older, living in all 50 states
and the District of Columbia, comprising 5 percent of the
total U.S. population.
An increase of $100 per month in the maximum Supplemental
Security Income (SSI) benefit led to an 11% reduction in the
number of people reporting a disability, the researchers found.
The study defined “disability” as a health condition
lasting six months or more that made it difficult or impossible
to go out alone.
The study, which appears in the March issue of The
Milbank Quarterly, correlated increases in income
support via SSI, a program designed to provide financial aid
to the poorest elderly or disabled Americans. Because SSI
payments vary by state and can go up or down over time, they
provided a convenient way to test the relationship.
Stephen Crystal, PhD, associate director for health services
research at Rutgers University’s Institute of Health,
Health Care Policy and Aging Research, said he was skeptical
of the study’s conclusions.
“There’s an implication that the important determinant
of health outcomes is economic resources, rather than access
to health care,” he said. “I think that is too
strong a claim to make from results like this.” He thought
the effect sizes were implausibly large and questionably short-term.
Source: Health Behavior News Service
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