Four in 10 Americans had trouble paying for medical care in 2007, according to the Commonwealth Fund’s latest study on medical debt.
The study, "Losing Ground: How the Loss of Adequate Health Insurance Is Burdening Working Families," looks at 2007 data on consumers’ and health costs.
The Fund’s researchers examine 4 areas of cost-related access problems when it comes to health care for Americans age 19-64:
- Those who did not fill a prescription (31%)
- People not seeing a specialist when needed (20%)
- Those skipping a medical test, treatment or follow up (25%)
- Adults with a medical problem, but not seeing a doctor or clinic (31%).
Overall, 45 percent of American adults age 19-64 had at least one of these cost-access problems. This includes 29 percent of people who were insured all year.


