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Dec.
31 - Health Improves for Previously Uninsured Adults After
Receiving Medicare Coverage
Previously uninsured adults who received Medicare coverage
reported improvements in health, especially those with cardiovascular
disease or diabetes, according to a study in the December
26 issue of JAMA.
“Uninsured near-elderly adults, particularly those
with cardiovascular disease or diabetes, experience worse
health outcomes and use more health services as Medicare beneficiaries
after age 65 years than insured near-elderly adults. Because
chronic diseases are prevalent and insurance coverage is often
unaffordable for older uninsured adults, the impact of near-universal
Medicare coverage at age 65 years on the health of previously
uninsured adults may be substantial,” the authors write.
J. Michael McWilliams, MD, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital
and Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues assessed
the association of acquiring Medicare coverage at age 65 years
with trends in self-reported health outcomes from ages 55
through 72 years for previously uninsured adults, especially
those with cardiovascular disease or diabetes. The researchers
analyzed survey data, collected from 1992 through 2004, from
the nationally representative Health and Retirement Study,
which included 5,006 adults who were continuously insured
and 2,227 adults who were persistently or intermittently uninsured
from ages 55 to 64. Changes in health trends were compared
for previously uninsured and insured adults after they acquired
Medicare coverage at age 65 years. The areas of health surveyed
included general health, change in general health, mobility,
agility, pain, depressive symptoms, and a summary measure
of these, along with adverse cardiovascular outcomes.
The researchers found that before age 65 years, summary health
scores worsened at a greater rate for uninsured adults than
for insured adults and were significantly worse at age 65
years. Compared with previously insured adults, previously
uninsured adults reported significantly improved health trends
after age 65 years for the summary measure and several component
measures. Relative to previously insured adults with cardiovascular
disease or diabetes, previously uninsured adults with these
conditions reported significantly improved trends in summary
health, change in general health, mobility, agility, and adverse
cardiovascular outcomes but not in depressive symptoms.
Previously uninsured adults without these conditions reported
improvement in depressive symptoms but not in summary health
or any other measure. By age 70 years, the expected difference
in summary health between previously uninsured and insured
adults with cardiovascular disease or diabetes was reduced
by 50%.
“Our findings have important policy implications. Proposals
to extend insurance coverage to uninsured near-elderly adults
have been introduced in the U.S. Congress and endorsed by
the American College of Physicians. Providing earlier health
insurance coverage for uninsured adults, particularly those
with cardiovascular disease or diabetes, may have considerable
social and economic value for the United States by improving
health outcomes,” the authors conclude.
Source: American Medical Association
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