New report shows 3 in 10 Americans that have insurance still face a financial barrier to care
Today, we released the results in the first report in a series on patient experiences with the health care system.
Today, we released the results in the first report in a series on patient experiences with the health care system.
Today, we released the results in the first report in a series on patient experiences with the health care system. The report, titled “Barriers to Health Care Access in the Patient Experience,” surveyed over 4,700 Americans to explore the barriers they face in access to health care and prescription medicines.
The survey revealed that 3 in 10 Americans that have insurance still face a financial barrier to care, like having trouble paying medical bills or having out-of-pocket costs that are more than they can afford. Health insurance just isn’t working like it should because insurers and pharmacy benefit managers are increasingly shifting more health care costs onto patients through high deductibles and coinsurance.
Health insurance benefit design and out-of-pocket costs are barriers to care that can lead to nonadherence (when a patient does not take their medicines as prescribed by their doctor). The study found:
The study also found insurer practices like utilization management – including prior authorization and step therapy – are more likely to affect the sickest and most vulnerable in our health care system. These findings include:
To fix these issues, 59% of patients prioritize lowering their out-of-pocket costs, not their premiums (41%). Other recent polling shows a drastic decline in public support by as much as 51 points, overall, for letting government set prices for medicines once Americans learn more about this policy. In particular:
With 40% of Americans reporting COVID-19 has made them more worried and anxious about their family’s ability to access care, policymakers should look at the entire health care landscape and patient experience to improve the health care system.
Read the report here and learn more about patient-centered solutions at PhRMA.org/BetterWay.