Popular Articles

First Swine Flu Deaths Announced In Israel And Saudi Arabia
On Monday, the Health Ministries of Israel and Saudi Arabia reported their countries" first deaths from H1N1 swine influenza.
pharmacy online
A Novel Marker Of Colorectal Carcinoma
Colorectal cancer is thought to result from a combination of environmental factors: diet, lifestyle, chronic inflammation and accumulation of specific genetic alterations. The pathogenesis and development of colorectal cancer involves multi-genes and multi-steps. TSPAN1 (GenBank Accession No. AF065388) is a new member of TM4SF located at chromosome 1 p34.1. It encodes a 241 amino acid protein. TSPAN1 was reported as a tumor-related gene recently.
News of the day
New Study May Help Understand How Alzheimer's Robs Sufferers Of Episodic Memory
Memory loss is love"s great thief. Those who suffer aren"t just the ones who can"t remember - family, friends and loved ones agonize over how to react when the disorder begins its often inexorable progress.
Mental Health

New EPI Healthcare Study By June O'Neill Shows Uninsured 'Crisis' Wildly Overestimated

The Employment Policies Institute (EPI) released a new study which shows that the widely employed estimate of 47 million uninsured Americans is a misleading representation of the problem. The study, authored by Drs. June and David O"Neill of Baruch College and City University of New York, shows that more than 43 percent, or 18 million, of uninsured Americans ages 18-64 could likely afford health coverage and are actually "voluntarily uninsured." June O"Neill served as Director of the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) from 1995-1999. Current policy proposals dramatically overestimate the cost of providing affordable health insurance for those Americans who currently cannot afford coverage due to a lack of understanding of who the involuntarily uninsured population is, why they lack coverage, and the amount of health care res that they currently access. With greater understanding and recognition of the diversity within the uninsured population, the goal of providing affordable health insurance to all Americans should be possible with solutions that cost far less than the CBO"s estimated figure of $1.6 trillion for implementing recent congressional proposals that would only address two-thirds of the problem. "We urge policymakers not to rush the healthcare debate. This study shows that we need to better understand American"s uninsured population and the factors affecting both coverage and access to care," said study author Dr. O"Neill. "This new information about the current uninsured population will increase policymakers" power to target those truly "at risk," provide the best coverage and health care access options for each population and decrease the cost of covering the uninsured." Using data from a number of surveys to determine what percentage of uninsured Americans are actually unable to afford it, the study finds that at least 43 percent of Americans in the 18-64 year-old age group have incomes at least 2.5 times the poverty level and are "voluntarily" uninsured. The study finds that 79 percent of people with incomes between 2.5 and 3.75 times the poverty level currently purchase private health insurance. In view of the large percentages covered at this level, the authors consider this uninsured group as having enough disposable income to purchase health insurance. "The uninsured are found to obtain about half the amount of health services received by the insured population," said study author Dr. O"Neill. "The lower health status of the involuntarily uninsured could be attributed to their level of education, income, and even lifestyle habits (such as smoking and obesity), more than the mere fact that they do not carry health insurance." The uninsured population also varies dramatically from state to state. For example, thirty percent of Texas residents are uninsured, compared to 18 percent of New York and 13 percent of D.C. residents. Three states (Texas, Florida and California) make up a third of the uninsured population. "Instead of focusing on a one-size fits all approach to health care coverage, we should look at what individual states are currently offering and provide additional federal support as needed," said study author Dr. O"Neill. Employment Policies Institute


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):