Department of Sociology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48103, USA.
J Health Soc Behav. 2013 Jun;54(2):204-20. doi: 10.1177/0022146513483772. Epub 2013 Apr 25.
Most American households carry debt, yet we have little understanding of how debt influences health behavior, especially health care seeking. We examined associations between foregone medical care and debt using a population-based sample of 914 southeastern Michigan residents surveyed in the wake of the late-2000s recession. Overall debt and ratios of debt to income and debt to assets were positively associated with foregoing medical or dental care in the past 12 months, even after adjusting for the poorer socioeconomic and health characteristics of those foregoing care and for respondents' household incomes and net worth. These overall associations were driven largely by credit card and medical debt, while housing debt and automobile and student loans were not associated with foregoing care. These results suggest that debt is an understudied aspect of health stratification.
大多数美国家庭都背负着债务,但我们对债务如何影响健康行为,尤其是医疗保健寻求行为,知之甚少。我们使用 2000 年代后期经济衰退后在密歇根州东南部对 914 名居民进行的一项基于人群的样本,调查了未进行医疗保健的情况与债务之间的关联。尽管对那些未进行护理的人的较差社会经济和健康特征以及受访者的家庭收入和净资产进行了调整,但总债务以及债务与收入和资产的比率与过去 12 个月中未进行医疗或牙科护理的情况呈正相关。这些总体关联主要是由信用卡和医疗债务驱动的,而住房债务以及汽车和学生贷款与未进行护理无关。这些结果表明,债务是健康分层的一个被低估的方面。