Health Lit Res Pract. 2021 Oct;5(4):e319-e332. doi: 10.3928/24748307-20211102-01. Epub 2021 Dec 9.
Health insurance literacy (HIL) may influence medical financial burden among people who are sick and the most vulnerable.
This study examined the relationships between HIL, health insurance factors, and medical debt among middle-age Americans, a population with an increasing prevalence of illnesses.
Linear and generalized linear regression analyses were conducted on data drawn from the 2015-2016 waves of the Health Reform Monitoring Survey, a national, internet-based sample of Americans age 18 to 64 years. The analytical sample included 8,042 people age 50 to 64 years.
Adjusted mean HIL scores did not differ by private versus public insurance or by out-of-pocket costs. Mean HIL scores were lower with higher deductibles; however, differences in mean scores were small. Higher HIL was associated with lower medical debt (odds ratio = 0.97; 95% confidence interval [0.96, 0.98]), but at the highest HIL score, the risk of having medical debt was still 13.8%. Public coverage, higher annual deductibles, and out-of-pocket costs were associated with higher risks of having medical debt.
The findings suggest that HIL plays an important role in medical debt burden. However, with the shift toward high cost-sharing insurance plans, addressing health care affordability issues along with HIL are critical to eliminate medical debt problems. Plain Language Summary: Understanding and using health insurance (also defined as health insurance literacy) may influence the ability to pay medical bills among people who are sick and vulnerable. This study examined the relationships among health insurance literacy, health insurance factors, and difficulty paying medical bills (i.e., medical debt) in Americans age 50 to 64 years using data from the Health Reform Monitoring Survey. People with higher health insurance literacy reported lower medical debt. Type of insurance coverage did not influence medical debt. Those with annual deductibles and out-of-pocket health care costs were more likely to report having medical debt.
健康保险知识(HIL)可能会影响患病和最脆弱人群的医疗财务负担。
本研究调查了中年美国人(一个疾病发病率不断上升的人群)的 HIL、健康保险因素与医疗债务之间的关系。
使用 2015-2016 年健康改革监测调查的全国性互联网样本数据,对线性和广义线性回归分析进行了分析。该分析样本包括 8042 名 50 至 64 岁的人群。
私人保险与公共保险或自付费用之间的调整后 HIL 评分没有差异。免赔额越高,平均 HIL 评分越低;但是,平均分数的差异很小。较高的 HIL 与较低的医疗债务相关(比值比=0.97;95%置信区间[0.96,0.98]),但在 HIL 得分最高时,仍有 13.8%的人有医疗债务。公共保险覆盖范围、较高的年度免赔额和自付费用与较高的医疗债务风险相关。
这些发现表明 HIL 在医疗债务负担中起着重要作用。然而,随着高自付费用保险计划的转变,解决医疗保健负担能力问题以及 HIL 对于消除医疗债务问题至关重要。