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Catholic Health-Care Solutions
Uninsured Often Find Help From Church
BY Tom McFeely CONTRIBUTING EDITOR
October 5-11, 2008 Issue |
Posted 9/30/08 at 9:00 AM
PITTSBURGH, Pa. — Camille Scott-Ford
had no health-care insurance — and no way to pay for medical care — until she
went to the new Catholic Charities Free Health Care Center in downtown
Pittsburgh, Pa., last March.
Scott-Ford, a divorced mother of two
who lost her family’s medical insurance four years ago when her ex-husband left
the military, fits the profile of many Americans who lack insurance.
She works as a nanny, and
consequently, isn’t eligible for Medicaid. But she can’t afford to buy medical
insurance on her limited income.
“I make an income, but you’re making
choices between: Do I eat, do I pay my rent, or do I have health care?” said
Scott-Ford, who has multiple sclerosis. “Unfortunately, the thing that tends to
go is the health care.”
Helping ease the plight of the
uninsured is a key goal of virtually everyone involved in the ongoing debate
over how to reform America’s health-care system, including Dr. Nancy Nielsen,
president of the American Medical Association (AMA). Nielsen, who is Catholic,
has said she intends to make helping the uninsured the key goal of her term as
AMA president.
“Forty-six million Americans are
uninsured,” Nielsen told the Register in an e-mail interview. “That’s not just
a statistic — it’s a tragedy.”
A 2004 study by the Kaiser Institute
quantifies the inequities that millions of uninsured Americans experience in
terms of getting medical care. Although U.S. law mandates that no individual
can be denied necessary medical treatment because they can’t afford to pay for
it, the uninsured nevertheless receive far fewer medical services on average
than other Americans.
The Kaiser Institute study found
that per capita medical spending for uninsured persons in 2004 was $1,629 —
almost 50% less than the $2,975 spent annually for persons with insurance.
And, the study reported, compared to
those with health insurance, the uninsured “receive less preventive care, are
diagnosed at more advanced disease states, and once diagnosed, tend to receive
less therapeutic care and have higher mortality rates.”
At the same time, according to an
analysis released in August by the National Center for Policy Analysis, the
magnitude of the uninsured problem is often overstated.
The analysis noted that the number
of uninsured actually decreased in 2007, from 47 million to 45.7 million. Of
those, 18 million lived in households with annual incomes above $50,000 and
could likely afford health insurance, the study said. And up to 14 million more
uninsured adults and children qualified for government programs in 2004 but had
not enrolled.
But even if the National Center for
Policy Analysis assessment is accurate, there are still a huge number of people
— more than 13 million Americans — who can’t afford medical insurance, but earn
too much to qualify for government programs.
Sister Carol Keehan, president of
the Catholic Health Association, said that as well as unjustly depriving people
of vital medical services, the current insurance system doesn’t make sense
economically.
That’s because uninsured people
commonly skip visits to doctors’ offices, since they are expected to pay
out-of-pocket for treatments they receive there.
Instead, they wait until their
medical problems are so severe that they must seek help at hospitals.
“They still get sick, and they show
up at the least-efficient and most-expensive venue for care — often too late to
be as effective as it could be, or sometimes just too late period,” Sister
Carol said in an interview with the Register in July. “What we’re talking about
is: No. 1, make the system efficient,” she said. “Don’t make people wait until
they’re so sick they’ve got to show up at an emergency room.”
While there is broad consensus that
something must be done to help the uninsured, there is less agreement about the
best way to deal with the problem.
Some Catholic groups agree with
those who believe the best approach is to extend insurance coverage through the
expansion of government-driven initiatives.
Catholic Charities USA — whose local
affiliates often deal with individuals facing hardships as a result of a lack
of health insurance — advocates several measures to assist the uninsured.
These include preserving Medicaid
and ensuring health coverage for all eligible children through the State
Children’s Health Insurance Program, restoration of benefits to legal
immigrants, expanding mental-health coverage for the poor and the vulnerable,
and easing documentation requirements for eligible populations.
The American Medical Association
takes a different approach. It advocates increased subsidies for lower-income
Americans through vouchers or tax subsidies directed to health-insurance
payments.
The AMA also advocates providing
vouchers or subsidies available to higher-income people so they can purchase
insurance on the open market, thereby shifting the system away from the current
dominance of employer-based private health-care insurance plans.
“If enough people have enough
purchasing power — and enough say over how that purchasing power is used —
insurers will be compelled to offer better, more affordable coverage options,”
the AMA states on its VoiceForTheUninsured.org website.
In its 2004 document “Health Care in
America: A Catholic Proposal for Renewal,” the Catholic Medical Association
supported a similar approach of making refundable tax credits to purchase
medical services or health coverage available to everyone who files a tax
return.
Lower-income working Americans who
lack insurance would use the tax credit to help pay for coverage. And like the
AMA, the Catholic Medical Association supports free choice in the insurance
market.
Doing so would facilitate the
creation of new forms of health plans that, according to one study, could provide
coverage for up to 8.5 million workers and their dependents who are currently
uninsured.
While the debate over health-care
reform continues, Pittsburgh’s Catholic Charities is already helping the
uninsured at its health-care center. Located in the organization’s
administrative building, the center opened in November 2007.
The free center is staffed by a team
of volunteer professional staff that includes doctors, dentists, nurses, dental
assistants and dental hygienists. By the time it ends its first year of
operation, the center expects to have served more than 4,000 patients.
Bishop David Zubik of Pittsburgh
visited the center on March 18, when the 1,000th patient, Camille Scott-Ford,
was treated. “This is a wonderful beginning, yet we must ensure that many more
people are able obtain the health and dental services they desperately need,
but cannot afford,” Bishop Zubik said in a press statement about his visit.
Scott–Ford is delighted with the
quality of the care she has received since she came to the center that day.
And she’s especially grateful, as a
non-Catholic, to be allowed to participate in the Catholic Charities’
initiative. Said Scott-Ford, “I think it’s phenomenal.”
Tom McFeely is based
in Victoria, British Columbia.
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