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High Healthcare Costs Force Families to Delay Treatment

Author: American Academy of Pediatrics
Published: 2011/05/02 - Updated: 2026/02/03
Publication Type: Reports & Proceedings
Category Topic: Insurance - Related Publications

Page Content: Synopsis - Introduction - Main - Insights, Updates

Synopsis: This research from the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies annual meeting, draws from Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data covering 6,273 families between 2001-2006. The findings demonstrate that healthcare expenses exceeding 10 percent of family income lead parents to postpone or skip necessary medical care and prescriptions for themselves and their children, regardless of insurance status. The study holds particular value for families managing chronic conditions, low-income households, and children with physical or cognitive limitations, as it quantifies how out-of-pocket costs, premiums, and deductibles create barriers to essential care. By identifying vulnerable populations and financial thresholds that trigger delayed treatment, this information helps policymakers understand the relationship between healthcare affordability and access while providing families with data-driven context for their own healthcare decisions - Disabled World (DW).

Introduction

The Cost of Being Healthy

It costs too much to be healthy - Study shows even families with insurance put off or go without care. The high cost of health care is deterring parents from taking their children to the doctor or buying prescription medication, regardless of how much money they make or whether they have health insurance, according to a study to be presented Sunday, May 2, at the Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) annual meeting in Denver.

Previous research has shown that families who have difficulty paying their medical bills may delay or forgo needed care. In this study, researchers sought to determine factors that affect families' decisions to put off or go without care, including the cost of health care relative to a family's income and having a child with a physical, social, behavioral or cognitive limitation such as asthma, autism or obesity.

Main Content

Investigators, led by Lauren E. Wisk, a doctoral student and graduate research assistant in the School of Medicine and Public Health at University of Wisconsin, Madison, examined data from the 2001-2006 Medical Expenditure Panel Surveys on 6,273 families with at least one child. Excessive financial burden was defined as insurance premiums and out-of-pocket health care expenses exceeding 10 percent of family income. Delayed or forgone care was defined as putting off or going without medical care or prescription medications for a parent or child due to cost and/or insurance-related reasons.

Results showed that experiencing excessive financial burden, having a child with an ongoing activity limitation and a parent having intermittent insurance all increased the likelihood that families would delay or go without care. However, when the parent and child had the same insurance, they were more likely to get the care they needed.

Additionally, significant racial/ethnic and income-related disparities existed in the experience of delayed or forgone care. For example, non-Hispanic black families were less likely to report delayed or forgone care than non-Hispanic white families. Meanwhile, families whose income was less than 100 percent of the federal poverty level were more likely to delay or go without care than families with incomes at or above 400 percent of the poverty level.

"Every U.S. family has a finite amount of resources available to them, and every day they have to make decisions about how to allocate those resources. This is especially true in today's economy where you hear people talk about 'feeling the pinch,'" Wisk said. "This study shows the unfortunate reality of the situation. Families aren't choosing to spend their money on going to the doctor when someone is sick because of how much it cost them to see the doctor last time. They're sacrificing their health because it costs too much to be healthy."

Wisk said public policies that reduce financial burden and provide insurance for families as a unit rather than individuals, such as BadgerCare in Wisconsin, may allow families to get the care they need.

"Moreover, families of children with activity limitations represent a particularly vulnerable group," she said, "and policies are needed to help provide accessible, affordable health care for these children."

Even when families are insured, they still bear part of the burden of health care costs (through premiums, deductibles, co-pays, etc.), she noted. When these costs exceed a certain threshold relative to a family's available income, they delay or forgo health care.

The researchers are planning to study how delaying or forgoing care affects health down the road.

"We expect that if people aren't getting the care they need, they'll be sicker as a result," Wisk said. "When you put this all together and look at the big picture, the cost of health care in the U.S. could actually be causing Americans to be sicker."

The Pediatric Academic Societies (PAS) are four individual pediatric organizations who co-sponsor the PAS Annual Meeting - the American Pediatric Society, the Society for Pediatric Research, the Academic Pediatric Association, and the American Academy of Pediatrics. Members of these organizations are pediatricians and other health care providers who are practicing in the research, academic and clinical arenas. The four sponsoring organizations are leaders in the advancement of pediatric research and child advocacy within pediatrics, and all share a common mission of fostering the health and well being of children worldwide.

Insights, Analysis, and Developments

Editorial Note: The paradox revealed in this study cuts to the heart of American healthcare: families sacrifice their health precisely because maintaining it costs too much. When parents calculate whether to fill a prescription or pay for a doctor's visit against competing necessities like rent and groceries, they're making impossible choices that no developed nation should ask of its citizens. The researchers' finding that insured families face these same dilemmas underscores how insurance alone doesn't guarantee access to care. As medical costs continue rising faster than wages, the question isn't whether families will delay treatment, but rather how much sicker we'll become as a society when prevention and early intervention remain luxuries instead of rights - Disabled World (DW).

Attribution/Source(s): This quality-reviewed publication was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World (DW) due to its relevance to the disability community. Originally authored by American Academy of Pediatrics and published on 2011/05/02, this content may have been edited for style, clarity, or brevity.

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APA: American Academy of Pediatrics. (2011, May 2 - Last revised: 2026, February 3). High Healthcare Costs Force Families to Delay Treatment. Disabled World (DW). Retrieved February 19, 2026 from www.disabled-world.com/disability/insurance/health-costs.php
MLA: American Academy of Pediatrics. "High Healthcare Costs Force Families to Delay Treatment." Disabled World (DW), 2 May. 2011, revised 3 Feb. 2026. Web. 19 Feb. 2026. <www.disabled-world.com/disability/insurance/health-costs.php>.
Chicago: American Academy of Pediatrics. "High Healthcare Costs Force Families to Delay Treatment." Disabled World (DW). Last modified February 3, 2026. www.disabled-world.com/disability/insurance/health-costs.php.

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