With consumer prices rising a steep 8.5 percent since last March, Americans worry about the economy and putting food on the table. Our brothers and sisters try to stretch their dollars to make ends meet.
This means less money left over to pay for medical care. Seeing the doctor for what appears to be a non-emergent health issue—like a mild cough, stomach pain, or even a medication adjustment—becomes even harder when inflation eats into our finances.
There is simply less money left over to pay for medical care. In the face of the financial pressure historic inflation creates, routine health care becomes secondary again to the daily struggles.
In many ways, this is the same situation that occurred at the height of COVID-19 when all health care was focused on the virus.
The sad reality is we see the toll of inflation in the emergency department every day. While patients used to go to the clinic without a second thought for assurance and treatment, patients now come to the emergency department when the pain becomes too severe or the symptoms too worrisome to ignore at home. The conversations with these patients are emotional, and they show us as physicians that inflation is making Americans sicker. And while we as physicians are called to heal, there is no prescription we can write in the emergency department to cure the disease of inflation.
Some may see inflation’s impact on health care and argue for larger government programs like "Medicare For All" or initiatives focused on putting more Americans on traditional Medicaid. These are undoubtedly the wrong approaches.
Attempting to pay for programs like this would require unrealistic and unsustainable tax hikes, compounding Americans’ financial strain by taking away even more of their money.
If the government attempted to expand these programs without raising taxes for the sake of political expediency, it would have to print more money to pay for health care—an approach that would further worsen inflation.
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/inflation-covid-health-care-marshall-crowe-bernstein
This means less money left over to pay for medical care. Seeing the doctor for what appears to be a non-emergent health issue—like a mild cough, stomach pain, or even a medication adjustment—becomes even harder when inflation eats into our finances.
There is simply less money left over to pay for medical care. In the face of the financial pressure historic inflation creates, routine health care becomes secondary again to the daily struggles.
In many ways, this is the same situation that occurred at the height of COVID-19 when all health care was focused on the virus.
The sad reality is we see the toll of inflation in the emergency department every day. While patients used to go to the clinic without a second thought for assurance and treatment, patients now come to the emergency department when the pain becomes too severe or the symptoms too worrisome to ignore at home. The conversations with these patients are emotional, and they show us as physicians that inflation is making Americans sicker. And while we as physicians are called to heal, there is no prescription we can write in the emergency department to cure the disease of inflation.
Some may see inflation’s impact on health care and argue for larger government programs like "Medicare For All" or initiatives focused on putting more Americans on traditional Medicaid. These are undoubtedly the wrong approaches.
Attempting to pay for programs like this would require unrealistic and unsustainable tax hikes, compounding Americans’ financial strain by taking away even more of their money.
If the government attempted to expand these programs without raising taxes for the sake of political expediency, it would have to print more money to pay for health care—an approach that would further worsen inflation.
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/inflation-covid-health-care-marshall-crowe-bernstein