Division of General Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor.
Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
JAMA Intern Med. 2022 Oct 1;182(10):1044-1051. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2022.3687.
The bidirectional association between health and financial stability is increasingly recognized.
To describe the association between chronic disease burden and patients' adverse financial outcomes.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study analyzed insurance claims data from January 2019 to January 2021 linked to commercial credit data in January 2021 for adults 21 years and older enrolled in a commercial preferred provider organization in Michigan.
Thirteen common chronic conditions (cancer, congestive heart failure, chronic kidney disease, dementia, depression and anxiety, diabetes, hypertension, ischemic heart disease, liver disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma, serious mental illness, stroke, and substance use disorders).
Adjusted probability of having medical debt in collections, nonmedical debt in collections, any delinquent debt, a low credit score, or recent bankruptcy, adjusted for age group and sex. Secondary outcomes included the amount of medical, nonmedical, and total debt among individuals with nonzero debt.
The study population included 2 854 481 adults (38.4% male, 43.3% female, 12.9% unknown sex, and 5.4% missing sex), 61.4% with no chronic conditions, 17.7% with 1 chronic condition, 14.8% with 2 to 3 chronic conditions, 5.4% with 4 to 6 chronic conditions, and 0.7% with 7 to 13 chronic conditions. Among the cohort, 9.6% had medical debt in collections, 8.3% had nonmedical debt in collections, 16.3% had delinquent debt, 19.3% had a low credit score, and 0.6% had recent bankruptcy. Among individuals with 0 vs 7 to 13 chronic conditions, the predicted probabilities of having any medical debt in collections (7.6% vs 32%), any nonmedical debt in collections (7.2% vs 24%), any delinquent debt (14% vs 43%), a low credit score (17% vs 47%) or recent bankruptcy (0.4% vs 1.7%) were all considerably higher for individuals with more chronic conditions and increased with each added chronic condition. Among individuals with medical debt in collections, the estimated amount increased with the number of chronic conditions ($784 for individuals with 0 conditions vs $1252 for individuals with 7-13 conditions) (all P < .001). In secondary analyses, results showed significant variation in the likelihood and amount of medical debt in collections across specific chronic conditions.
This cross-sectional study of commercially insured adults linked to patient credit report outcomes shows an association between increasing burden of chronic disease and adverse financial outcomes.
健康与财务稳定之间的双向关联正日益受到重视。
描述慢性病负担与患者不良财务结果之间的关联。
设计、地点和参与者:本横断面研究分析了 2019 年 1 月至 2021 年 1 月期间密歇根州一家商业首选供应商组织中 21 岁及以上成年人的保险索赔数据,并与 2021 年 1 月的商业信用数据相关联。
13 种常见的慢性疾病(癌症、充血性心力衰竭、慢性肾脏病、痴呆、抑郁和焦虑、糖尿病、高血压、缺血性心脏病、肝病、慢性阻塞性肺疾病和哮喘、严重精神疾病、中风和物质使用障碍)。
调整后的有医疗债务在收集中、非医疗债务在收集中、任何拖欠债务、信用评分低或最近破产的概率,按年龄组和性别进行调整。次要结局包括在有非零债务的个体中医疗、非医疗和总债务的数量。
研究人群包括 2854481 名成年人(38.4%为男性,43.3%为女性,12.9%为未知性别,5.4%为性别缺失),61.4%无慢性疾病,17.7%有 1 种慢性疾病,14.8%有 2-3 种慢性疾病,5.4%有 4-6 种慢性疾病,0.7%有 7-13 种慢性疾病。在队列中,9.6%有医疗债务在收集中,8.3%有非医疗债务在收集中,16.3%有拖欠债务,19.3%有信用评分低,0.6%有最近破产。在有 0 种与 7-13 种慢性疾病的个体中,患有任何医疗债务在收集中(7.6%与 32%)、任何非医疗债务在收集中(7.2%与 24%)、任何拖欠债务(14%与 43%)、信用评分低(17%与 47%)或最近破产(0.4%与 1.7%)的个体中,患有更多慢性疾病的个体的预测概率明显更高,且随着每增加一种慢性疾病而增加。在有医疗债务在收集中的个体中,估计金额随着慢性疾病数量的增加而增加(有 0 种疾病的个体为 784 美元,有 7-13 种疾病的个体为 1252 美元)(均 P<0.001)。在二次分析中,结果表明,特定慢性疾病的医疗债务在收集中的可能性和金额存在显著差异。
本研究对商业保险成年人进行了横断面研究,结果表明,慢性疾病负担的增加与不良财务结果之间存在关联。