- Doctors Describe Texas Dairy Farm Worker’s Case of Bird Flu
- Does Preschool Boost Kids’ Long-Term Academic Success? Study Finds Mixed Results
- AI Might Spot Rare Diseases in Patients Years Earlier
- An Orangutan Healed Himself With Medicinal Plant
- Quit-Smoking Meds Not Working for You? Try Upping the Dose
- Fewer Americans Are Suffering Most Dangerous Form of Heart Attack
- Even Skipping Meat for One Meal Helps Liver Disease Patients
- You May Not Have to Fast Before Catheter-Based Heart Test, Study Suggests
- EPA Earmarks $3 Billion to Replace Lead Pipes Nationwide
- Johnson & Johnson Will Pay $6.5 Billion to Settle Talc Ovarian Cancer Lawsuits
Insurance Ups the Odds of Beating Cancer
Your chances of surviving cancer may depend on the type of insurance you have.
Researchers from the Cancer Prevention Institute of California found significant improvements in survival among cancer patients with private insurance or Medicare, but not among those who have public insurance such as Medicaid, or are uninsured.
The investigators analyzed data on more than 1.1 million patients in California diagnosed with the five most common types cancer in the state — breast, colon, lung, melanoma and prostate — between 1997 and 2014.
Compared with people who had private insurance, those who had no insurance had a much higher death rate for all cancers except prostate. Those with Medicaid had a much higher death rate for all cancer types except lung cancer, the researchers found.
Also, they found that Medicaid patients had higher survival rates than uninsured people with breast, lung or prostate cancer, but there was little or no difference for colon cancer or melanoma.
“A lack of access to preventative health care is likely to have played a key role in these survival disparities, especially for breast and colorectal cancer, for which established screening practices exist,” lead researcher Libby Ellis said in an institute news release.
She also noted that people without insurance or with public insurance such as Medicaid also may also trouble getting high-quality cancer care.
The findings were published online Nov. 30 in the journal JAMA Oncology.
More information
The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more on cancer.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.