For life expectancy, money matters (Harvard Gazette)
Study: After Medicaid expansion, 17 percent drop in cardiac arrests (Oregon live)Being poor in the United States is so hazardous to your health, a new study shows, that the average life expectancy of the lowest-income classes in America is now equal to that in Sudan or Pakistan.
A Harvard analysis of 1.4 billion Internal Revenue Service records on income and life expectancy that showed staggering differences in life expectancy between the richest and poorest also found evidence that low-income residents in wealthy areas, such as New York City and San Francisco, have life expectancies significantly longer than those in poorer regions.
When researchers compared the number of sudden cardiac arrests in Multnomah County before and after the Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act, they expected to see a decline.
They did – but it was bigger than expected.
"The real surprise is not that it dropped," said Dr. Eric Stecker, a cardiologist at Oregon Health and Science University and lead author on the study. "It was the magnitude – about a 17 percent reduction."
The study, published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Heart Association, confirms other research showing that an expansion of insurance coverage reduces mortality rates.
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