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Study Shows Ohioans Making Scary Moves Because Of Health Care Cost Concerns

Capital University student Kathryn Poe, who is diabetic after a bone marrow transplant to deal with a life threatening illness, talked about her concerns about the costs of medical care at a press conference with UHCAN, which released the Altarum survey.
Karen Kasler
Capital University student Kathryn Poe, who is diabetic after a bone marrow transplant to deal with a life threatening illness, talked about her concerns about the costs of medical care at a press conference with UHCAN, which released the Altarum survey.

A group that supports single-payer health care is highlighting a study that shows Ohioans are very worried about paying medical costs, and are taking dangerous steps because of it.

The Universal Health Care Action Network of Ohio released the results of a study by the health research firm Altarum, which talked to around a thousand Ohioans in March.

Lynn Quincy from Altarum said in the last year, half of those surveyed experienced health care affordability burdens: they either went uninsured, struggled to pay for medical care, or avoided or delayed it.  And even more people - 4 out of 5 - said they're worried about being able to afford health care in the future.  Quincy said the respondents report across party lines that they want government to solve these problems.

Prescription drugs are a big concern. 70 percent of respondents said they take one or more prescription medications - 89% of seniors do. And more than half of those said they are worried about affording their drugs.

And Quincy said a big number didn’t fill prescriptions, cut their drugs in half, or adjusted or skipped dosages: “About one quarter of adults in Ohio – that’s everyone, whether they consumed medical care last year or not – did one of those things. That’s a shockingly high number and a dangerous number.”

And there are concerns about unexpected or "surprise" medical bills. About a third of privately-insured Ohioans said they'd gotten a bill they didn't anticipate, and only a third were solved satisfactorily.

Quincy said there were several proposed solutions that were supported by over 90 percent of respondents: making it easy to switch insurance companies, price transparency, requiring insurers to provide cost estimates upfront and authorizing the Attorney General to take legal action on price gouging or drug price hikes.

Contact Karen at 614-578-6375 or at kkasler@statehousenews.org.
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