On Thursday, April 23, the AJC opened its editorial page to two experts on the topic of public health insurance and current state of health care. One expert is Art Kellerman, who holds an impressive resume as a professor of emergency medicine, an associate dean of health policy at Emory University, a head of Grady Memorial Hospital’s emergency room and a former co-chair of the Institute of Medicine’s Committee on the Consequences of Uninsurance.
In his editorial, he uses an anecdote to describe a situation in which a woman had stopped taking her blood pressure medicine days before suffering a severe hemorage that killed her. Despite being employed, she was uninsured, and could no longer afford the life-saving medicine. To Kellerman, “this story illustrates what is wrong with America’s health care system. My patient got excellent, high-tech care, but too late to do any good. Ironically, my team’s futile effort to save her life cost far more money than the medicine she needed to stay healthy. …One reason America scores so poorly is that we ration health care, based largely on ability to pay. Uninsured Americans get about half the care of insured Americans, so they tend to be sicker and to die sooner.” Read the rest of this entry →