By Rohan Khera, M.D.
Cardiology Fellow
One in 10 U.S. adults
suffers from atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). Sufferers of this
chronic illness have long-term health care needs and require frequent
outpatient visits, daily medications, and often emergency and inpatient care.
Health care encounters currently do not assess whether our patients are
burdened by health care costs, nor how frequently financial challenges modify
their health-related behavior. In a set of studies that we presented at the
Scientific Sessions, we leveraged national data and reported on financial
challenges experienced by ASCVD patients and their families.
We made several
important observations. First, one in four low-income households with a member
with ASCVD experience yearly out-of-pocket health care expenses exceeding 20
percent of their annual income, and nearly one in 10 have expenses that exceed
40 percent of that annual income – levels that are considered financially
catastrophic. We found that the rate of such catastrophic financial
expenditures was actually higher in those with health insurance, particularly
for those with self-purchased private insurance.
In a subsequent evaluation,
we found that while uninsured individuals had lower health care costs, this was
likely due to the deferral of non-urgent health care. Uninsured individuals
with ASCVD had substantially lower odds of accessing outpatient or inpatient
health care services for the same set of health conditions as the insured.
Notably, they were equally likely to seek emergency medical care.