Sick, Sicker, Sickest
An estimated 43% of US children (32 million) currently have at least 1 of 20 chronic health conditions assessed, increasing to 54.1% when overweight, obesity, or being at risk for developmental delays are included... Science Direct 2011
We ran the post below in 2011. Robert Kennedy, Jr. has been vocal about the demise of pediatric health, and he's taking a drubbing for it. How DARE he! The Make America Healthy Again slogan is really about our future as a nation. If he can open hearts, minds and eyes, our society as a whole will benefit.
Generations of sick Americans will not fill tax coffers, will not be able to fight in the forever war of the moment, will not be able to care for their aging parents or their own children, if they can even have children. The cost of chronic sickness is really immeasurable as it affects every aspect of society. Of course, sickness means profit for the insurance, hospital, health"care" and pharmaceutical industries.
Age of Autism - 2011
A recent study (below) states that 54% of American children currently suffer from chronic illness. WHY? When did school nurses become pharmaceutical specialists? When did reading and writing require an Epi-pen? Why does a jar of Skippy need a skull and crossbones for so many kids? When was Romper Room replaced by Early Intervention? And when did the gee-whiz days of youth come to mean G-tubes for feeding? Our kids are sick. Pediatrics has failed them miserably despite dozens of "well" visits before school age. What the hell has gone so wrong? We need to demand answers. This report concludes we need more specialists and healthcare access. But what if that's the actual problem? We need a yellow alert... Come to our Age of Autism presentation on Friday at 1:30 at Autism One to learn more. And stay tuned. You're about to be called into action.
Abstract Read Full Study HERE
Background
Parent/consumer–reported data is valuable and necessary for population-based assessment of many key child health and health care quality measures relevant to both the Children’s Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act (CHIPRA) of 2009 and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA).
Objectives
The aim of this study was to evaluate national and state prevalence of health problems and special health care needs in US children; to estimate health care quality related to adequacy and consistency of insurance coverage, access to specialist, mental health and preventive medical and dental care, developmental screening, and whether children meet criteria for having a medical home, including care coordination and family centeredness; and to assess differences in health and health care quality for children by insurance type, special health care needs status, race/ethnicity, and/or state of residence.
Methods
National and state level estimates were derived from the 2007 National Survey of Children’s Health (N = 91 642; children aged 0–17 years). Variations between children with public versus private sector health insurance, special health care needs, specific conditions, race/ethnicity, and across states were evaluated using multivariate logistic regression and/or standardized statistical tests.
Results
An estimated 43% of US children (32 million) currently have at least 1 of 20 chronic health conditions assessed, increasing to 54.1% when overweight, obesity, or being at risk for developmental delays are included; 19.2% (14.2 million) have conditions resulting in a special health care need, a 1.6 point increase since 2003. Compared with privately insured children, the prevalence, complexity, and severity of health problems were systematically greater for the 29.1% of all children who are publicly insured children after adjusting for variations in demographic and socioeconomic factors. Forty-five percent of all children in the United States scored positively on a minimal quality composite measure: 1) adequate insurance, 2) preventive care visit, and 3) medical home. A 22.2 point difference existed across states and there were wide variations by health condition (autism, 22.8, to asthma, 39.4). After adjustment for demographic and health status differences, quality of care varied between children with public versus private health insurance on all but the following 3 measures: not receiving needed mental health services, care coordination, and performance on the minimal quality composite. A 4.60 fold (gaps in insurance) to 1.27 fold (preventive dental and medical care visits) difference in quality scores was observed across states. Notable disparities were observed among publicly insured children according to race/ethnicity and across all children by special needs status and household income.
Conclusions
Findings emphasize the importance of health care insurance duration and adequacy, health care access, chronic condition management, and other quality of care goals reflected in the 2009 CHIPRA legislation and the ACA. Despite disparities, similarities for public and privately insured children speak to the pervasive nature of availability, coverage, and access issues for mental health services in the United States, as well as the system-wide problem of care coordination and accessing specialist care for all children. Variations across states in key areas amenable to state policy and program management support cross-state learning and improvement efforts.
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Bill; There are not easy answers.
You talk to me like you blame me.
We all voted Democrat, got all Democrats in cause we were sick of hearing each party say if only for the other party would go along with what ever plan they planned.
What year was that?
2008- 1009.
Mean while in Canda; all the Canadians were happy, happy people free health care, socialism, nanny state that cared and then they found out what happens when - eventually socialism turns against the people and run by tyrants. What is the assisted suicide rate at in Canada? It is going up each year, with many people saying they have no choice but to allow the government to help them die. The doctors in Canada have dropped out by the thousands. More so since many of them have sickened and died from the covid vaccine.
Great Britian; I have been here long enough to hear from the Brits and how health care is going for them. It is a long, waiting que to get test, medical treatment unless they are willing to pay out of their own pocket.
By the way I deeply resent you stereotyping me as any thing since you don't know me at all. Am I a fundamentalist? I don't think so. What are my thoughts on Israel? Maybe not what you stereotypically would think perhaps.
Posted by: Benedetta | September 28, 2024 at 04:06 PM
Bill what is your objective?
Posted by: visitor IH | September 28, 2024 at 03:40 PM
Benedetta, do you now see the importance of low-cost public health care like they have in the UK and Japan etc. You are being an almost certain Christian fundamentalist did you know that your favorite country Israel has public health care including prescription drugs, but it does not have dental coverage (sadly). Why not advocate for a similar health care system here in the USA? Is there a cognitive dissonance in your mind about this issue?
Epi pens should be a low cost and an over-the-counter medicine that is part of a standard first aid kit as they are in some countries like Canada is doing recently. If those people in both parties in Washington want Narcan to be over the counter, why not asthmas related medicine and Epi pens for serious allergies?!
Posted by: Bill | September 27, 2024 at 01:36 PM
Why does a 30 something, red headed man have to come into the doctor's office with his mother to get a shot of an epi-pen because he cannot afford to keep one at home?
After his dose of an epi-pen, he came back out to sit down by his mother. He then told us his story. He developed a peanut allergy, a year ago. Yes, he was an adult. He said it was not a stuffy nose, and a cough but can't breath and going to die kind of allergy.
He went to the pharmacy to purchase his epi-pen. It was like 5,000 dollars. It was not one bundle of many pens, just one. They thought it was a mistake, they thought this pharmacy was over charging, but that was not the case.
Posted by: Benedetta | September 27, 2024 at 08:18 AM