Department of Health Behavior, Society and Policy, Rutgers School of Public Health, Piscataway, NJ, United States of America; Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ, United States of America.
Department of Health Behavior, Society and Policy, Rutgers School of Public Health, Piscataway, NJ, United States of America.
Prev Med. 2022 Nov;164:107248. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2022.107248. Epub 2022 Sep 8.
Medical debt has grown dramatically over the past few decades. While cancer and diabetes are known to be associated with medical debt, little is known about the impact of other medical conditions and health behaviors on medical debt. We analyzed cross-sectional data on 9174 households - spanning lower-income, middle-income, and higher-income based on the Census poverty threshold - participating in the 2019 wave of the nationally representative United States Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID). The outcomes were presence of any medical debt and presence of medical debt≥ $2000. Respondents reported on medical conditions (diabetes, cancer, heart disease, chronic lung disease, asthma, arthritis, anxiety disorders, mood disorders) and on health behaviors (smoking, heavy drinking). Medical debt was observed in lower-income households with heart disease (OR = 2.64, p-value = 0.006) and anxiety disorders (OR = 2.16, p-value = 0.02); middle-income households with chronic lung disease (OR = 1.73, p-value = 0.03) and mood disorders (OR = 1.53, p-value = 0.04); and higher-income households with a current smoker (OR = 2.99, p-value<0.001). Additionally, medical debt ≥$2000 was observed in lower-income households with asthma (OR = 2.16, p-value = 0.009) and a current smoker (OR = 1.62, p-value = 0.04); middle income households with hypertension (OR = 1.65, p-value = 0.05). These novel findings suggest that the harms of medical debt extend beyond cancer, diabetes and beyond lower-income households. There is an urgent need for policy and health services interventions to address medical debt in a wider range of disease contexts than heretofore envisioned. Intervention development would benefit from novel conceptual frameworks on the causal relationships between health behaviors, health conditions, and medical debt that center social-ecological influences on all three of these domains.
在过去几十年中,医疗债务急剧增长。虽然癌症和糖尿病与医疗债务有关,但人们对其他医疗状况和健康行为对医疗债务的影响知之甚少。我们分析了参与 2019 年全国代表性美国收入动态小组研究(PSID)的 9174 户家庭(根据人口普查贫困标准分为低收入、中等收入和高收入)的横断面数据。结果是存在任何医疗债务和存在医疗债务≥$2000。受访者报告了医疗状况(糖尿病、癌症、心脏病、慢性肺部疾病、哮喘、关节炎、焦虑障碍、情绪障碍)和健康行为(吸烟、大量饮酒)。患有心脏病(OR=2.64,p 值=0.006)和焦虑障碍(OR=2.16,p 值=0.02)的低收入家庭中观察到医疗债务;患有慢性肺部疾病(OR=1.73,p 值=0.03)和情绪障碍(OR=1.53,p 值=0.04)的中等收入家庭;以及目前吸烟者(OR=2.99,p 值<0.001)的高收入家庭。此外,患有哮喘(OR=2.16,p 值=0.009)和目前吸烟者(OR=1.62,p 值=0.04)的低收入家庭中观察到医疗债务≥$2000;患有高血压(OR=1.65,p 值=0.05)的中等收入家庭。这些新发现表明,医疗债务的危害不仅限于癌症、糖尿病和低收入家庭。迫切需要政策和卫生服务干预措施,以解决比以往想象的更广泛的疾病背景下的医疗债务问题。干预措施的制定将受益于关于健康行为、健康状况和医疗债务之间因果关系的新颖概念框架,该框架以社会生态影响为中心,涵盖了这三个领域。