Excerpted from: The New York Times, November 3, 2007
Worsening the odds
Bob Herbert
full text, including the story of Lonnie Lynam, self-employed carpenter from Pipe Creek, Texas, can be found here.
Cancer is no longer the all-but-automatic death sentence that it once was. Extraordinary progress has been made in fighting the myriad forms of the disease.
But, as the American Cancer Society has recently been stressing, the health coverage crisis in the U.S. is a major drag on this fight.
"A woman without health insurance who gets a breast cancer diagnosis is at least 40 percent more likely to die," said John Seffrin, the cancer society's chief executive.
According to the cancer society: "Uninsured patients and those on Medicaid are much more likely than those with private health insurance to be diagnosed with cancer in its later stages, when it is more often fatal."
The uninsured (and underinsured) are also much less likely to get the most effective treatment after the diagnosis is made.
There are 47 million Americans without health insurance and another 17 million with coverage that will not pay for the treatments necessary to fight cancer and other very serious diseases.
The bottom line, said Mr. Seffrin, is that "the number of people who are suffering needlessly from cancer because they don't have access to quality health care is very large and increasing as I speak."
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Thanks to Julia for posting this article.