Story Highlights
- One in four adults are skipping care or medicine due to rising costs
- Two-fifths are concerned about affording needed care in next six months
- Women under 50 are disproportionally forgoing care and prescription drugs
Editor's Note: The research detailed below was conducted in partnership with West Health, a family of nonprofit and nonpartisan organizations focused on lowering healthcare costs for seniors.
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Rising healthcare costs have compelled nearly four in 10 Americans in the past six months to delay or skip healthcare treatments, trim regular household expenses or borrow money. That translates into an estimated 98 million adults having to take extraordinary steps to afford healthcare. These results are based on a new study by and ºÚÁÏÍø.
Economizing to afford healthcare is much more common among those in lower-income households. Over half of adults in households earning less than $48,000 per year report cutting some spending. But even among those in households earning at least $180,000, 19% of respondents have pared back to pay for healthcare, highlighting the fact that the burden of high healthcare costs affects a broad socioeconomic portion of the population.
Women, particularly those younger than 50, are disproportionately being compelled to cut back on healthcare due to its rising costs. Three in 10 women overall (30%) report having done so, compared with 22% of men -- and this percentage swells to 36% among women under 50.
This survey was conducted by web June 2-16, 2022, with 3,001 U.S. adults via the , a probability-based, non-opt-in panel of about 115,000 adults nationwide.
One in Four Americans Have Skipped Treatment
Overall, 26% of adults report delaying or avoiding medical care or purchasing prescription drugs in the prior six months due to higher healthcare prices. This rises to 43% among adults in lower-income households (those making less than $24,000 annually).
The survey found that those who are cutting spending on non-healthcare-related expenses -- including food, gas and electricity -- are substantially more likely to be cutting spending on healthcare as well. For example:
- Of those who cut back on utilities, 59% also cut back on medical care and medicine.
- Of those who skipped a meal, 71% also cut back on medical care and medicine.
- Of those who borrowed money, 60% also cut back on medical care and medicine.
- Of those who drove less, 55% also cut back on medical care and medicine.
- Of those who did any of the above, 51% also cut back on medical care and medicine.
Inflation in General Is Curbing Consumer Spending
Increased prices nationwide have also affected consumer spending habits over the prior six months. Three-fifths of adults (59%) report driving less and 30% report cutting back on utilities because of the higher prices of goods in the U.S. One in five (21%) report delaying or avoiding medical care or purchasing prescription drugs because of inflation in general -- a similar percentage to the cutback based on healthcare inflation.
The effect of inflation exacerbates an already significant issue for millions of Americans struggling to pay for healthcare and medicine. Prior findings from the 2021 West Health-ºÚÁÏÍø Healthcare Study showed that an estimated 18% of adults, or about 46 million people, could not afford needed care if they required it today and that 7% of Americans have been unable to pay for prescribed drugs in the prior three months.
Healthcare is not at the forefront of Americans' minds when asked which expenses they expect to rise most in the next six months. Gas leads this list, chosen by 43%, followed by food (34%). Healthcare, in contrast, is picked by only 3% of respondents.
Republicans, Independents More Concerned About Healthcare Affordability
With 38% of Americans cutting back on key household expenses due to rising healthcare costs, concerns about being unable to pay for needed care in the next six months continue to run high. Overall, 39% report being "extremely concerned" or "concerned" about being unable to pay for care, including 33% of Democrats, 44% of Republicans and 42% of independents. And, as found in prior West Health-ºÚÁÏÍø research, women and people of color are disproportionately affected by the high cost of care. Women are 17% more likely than men to report concern, and Black adults are 16% more likely than White adults to do so.
In 2021, 42% reported being "very concerned" or "concerned" about being able to pay for healthcare via a similarly worded question framed around "the next 12 months."
Little Confidence Exists in Federal and State Governments to Curtail Costs
Irrespective of race, gender, income or political identity, Americans hold little confidence in their elected representatives in Congress or in their own state government to slow rising costs.
Just 6% are "somewhat" or "very confident" in their congressional representatives, while 59% are "not at all confident" and another 35% are "not too confident." Men are more pessimistic than women, and men under the age of 50 are particularly so, with 70% reporting that they are not at all confident. And while Republicans and independents report elevated levels of concern about future healthcare affordability, across all three political identity groups, more than nine in 10 are not at all confident or not too confident in their elected representatives to lower the cost of healthcare.
When asked the same question in the context of their state government rather than members of Congress, Americans are only marginally less pessimistic, with 55% reporting that they are not at all confident and 11% saying they are very or somewhat confident that action to reduce costs will occur. White and Hispanic adults account for the slightly less negative views, with 10% and 12%, respectively, reporting that they are very or somewhat confident -- about double the rates measured for members of Congress.
Implications
The latest West Health-ºÚÁÏÍø research on the U.S. healthcare system adds to a growing body of data showing how Americans are attempting to cope with the high cost of care in a broadly inflationary environment. Healthcare inflation, which stood at , is lagging overall inflation, which spiked to 9.1% in June, a new 40-year high primarily because of rising prices for gas, food and rent.
Inflation has not yet fully hit healthcare prices due to prenegotiated contracts with insurers and providers for 2022, but inflation is likely to impact prices later in the year -- something that consumers may not fully appreciate given the mere 3% that cite healthcare as the service expected to rise in price the most in the next six months.
However, unlike food, gas, housing and utilities, healthcare costs have been on the rise for decades and, independent of inflation, healthcare prices start at a much higher level. According to a recent study published in , launch prices for new drugs increased by 20% per year from 2008 to 2021, amounting to a 10-fold increase in just over a decade.
The research also underscores the extent to which Americans view healthcare through a partisan prism. Republicans (and, notably, independents) are somewhat more concerned than Democrats about being able to pay for needed healthcare in the coming months, though the consequences of high healthcare prices seem to affect all political groups the same and Democrats are more motivated to vote based on this issue. As such, this may have an impact on voting patterns in coming elections -- but voters of all party affiliations have little faith in either Congress or their state government to rein in prices in the coming months. For elected officials, these new results detailing the struggles of Americans may well serve as a call to action and an opportunity to prove the public wrong.
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