Health Care Crisis
Reported September 13, 2007
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (Ivanhoe Broadcast News) --
Michael Moore brought the crisis to the big screen -- health care in America.
While it's easy to recognize the problem, finding a good solution is not.
Up to 98,000 Americans are killed each year by medical errors. Some experts even
more people are killed when patients don't take life-saving medications. Not
because they don't care but, sometimes, because they can't afford them.
Allison Rosen, M.D., from the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor is heading up
a study that's trying to change that. The idea -- making lifesaving medications
free while still charging a co-pay on prescriptions that treat more minor
problems.
"In the auto industry, you don't pay any extra money for wheels and doors, but
you may pay extra for your XM radio. It's sort of the same idea," says Dr.
Rosen.
Nicoleta Shock has diabetes and relies on insulin for survival. "It's like your
life depends on it. If you don't have it, you die," she says. With two kids, one
dog and a strained income, paying for it isn't easy. "You are either going to
feed your kids or you are going to take medicine, which one are you going to
pick?"
Now, under the new program, Shock's insulin and some of her medications are
free. She saves about $35 month. It might not sound like a lot, but it is to
her. "Every $35, yes, helps a great deal," she says.
Dr. Rosen says, "We spend more than two-times any other country in the world,
yet we run 24th in what's called disability-adjusted life years." She says she
hopes being smarter about how we invest our healthcare dollars will save money
and, more importantly, save lives in the long run.
In the University of Michigan program for school employees, there's no co-pay
for generic meds, preferred-brand prices have been cut in half, and
non-preferred brand prices are reduced by a quarter.
For more information, please contact:
Kara Gavin
University of Michigan Health System
Media Relations
(734) 764-2220
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