Medicaid Reform Advocates Coalition Blog

The Medicaid Reform Advocates Coalition is a group of consumer advocacy organizations monitoring the implementation and effects of the Florida Medicaid Reform. MRAC coalition partners represent different constituencies affected by Medicaid Reform. MRAC ‘s mission is to ensure that consumers’ interests are safeguarded as they are enrolled in private managed care plans and that the level of care they receive is adequate and appropriate for their needs. Contact MRAC at medicaidreform@pobox.com.

Monday, January 22, 2007

Strictly my Opinion

The following article is posted by Dr. Marion D. Thorpe, Jr. and is not intended to convey or suggest the collective belief of the MRAC; but rather, this article is intended to highlight the disgust felt by one man towards the ineptitude of America's approach to closure of the Health Care disparities gap. Until Medicaid Reform makes an earnest attempt to implement a true Patient-Driven system with premium focus on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention amongst all people, it will fail in Florida and throughout this Nation. The humane implications of "leaderless leadership" within the Health Care reform arena are astoundingly detrimental to America's infrastructure and future.


State Inmates Outlive People on Outside

State Prisoners, Particularly Blacks, Outliving People on Outside, Government Reports

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/LegalCenter/wireStory?id=2811494


WASHINGTON Jan 21, 2007 (AP)
— State prison inmates, particularly blacks, are living longer on average than people on the outside, the government said Sunday.

Inmates in state prisons are dying at an average yearly rate of 250 per 100,000, according to the latest figures reported to the Justice Department by state prison officials. By comparison, the overall population of people between age 15 and 64 is dying at a rate of 308 a year.

For black inmates, the rate was 57 percent lower than among the overall black population 206 versus 484. But white and Hispanic prisoners both had death rates slightly above their counterparts in the overall population.

The Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics said 12,129 state prisoners died between 2001 through 2004.

Eight percent were murdered or killed themselves, 2 percent died of alcohol, drugs or accidental injuries, and 1 percent of the deaths could not be explained, the report said.

The rest of the deaths 89 percent were due to medical reasons. Of those, two-thirds of inmates had the medical problem they died of before they were admitted to prison.

Medical problems that were most common among both men and women in state prisons were heart disease, lung and liver cancer, liver diseases and AIDS-related causes.

But the death rate among men was 72 percent higher than among women. Nearly one-quarter of the women who died had breast, ovarian, cervical or uterine cancer.

Four percent of the men who died had prostate or testicular cancer.

More than half the inmates 65 or older who died in state prisons were at least 55 when they were admitted to prison.

State prison officials reported that 94 percent of their inmates who died from an illness had been evaluated by a medical professional for that illness, and 93 percent got medication for it.

Eighty-nine percent of these inmates had gotten X-rays, MRI exams, blood tests and other diagnostic work, state prison officials told the bureau.

On the Net:

Bureau of Justice Statistics report: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/mcdsp04.htm

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.


My closing question: Why do incarcerated African-American males have more sound, accessible, and affordable Health Care than law-abiding African-American males?


Sincerely,

Dr. Marion D. Thorpe, Jr.