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(Matt Collamer, Unsplash)

This article is brought to you thanks to the collaboration of The European Sting with the World Economic Forum.

Author: Sean Fleming, Senior Writer, Formative Content


  • More than 13% of American adults say they have at least one friend or family member who died in the last five years after being unable to afford medical care.
  • People of colour, younger people and those with low incomes were far more likely to know someone who died under these circumstances.
  • The US does not have a universal healthcare program, and there’s a link between income and ability to afford medical treatment.

This is a stark statistic: 34 million Americans know someone who died after being unable to afford needed medical treatment.

Gallup asked 1,095 people the following question: “Has there been a time in the last five years when a friend or family member passed away after not receiving treatment for their condition due to their inability to pay for it?”

While 13% answered “yes,” there are significant variations among the sample.

13.4% of Americans said they know someone who has died after being unable to pay for needed medical treatment.
Image: Gallup

People of colour were far more likely than white people to know someone who died after being unable to pay for medical treatment – 20.3% vs. 9.6%.

Younger respondents were also more likely to have answered “yes” – 16.9% of respondents age 18-44 and 12.4% of respondents age 45-64. Only 6.6% of baby boomers answered “yes,” by comparison.

Image: Statista

Income and voting intentions

In 2017, the median household income in the United States was $61,372 – and not surprisingly, income also affected respondents’ answers. Among those earning less than $40,000, 18.5% were likely to have known someone who couldn’t afford potentially life-saving treatment, compared to 9.1% of those earning more than $100,000.

In a country which does not have a universal healthcare program, the link between income and access to services – or the lack of access – is hard to miss.

But the Gallup poll also illustrated a less obvious finding: the correlation between political affiliation and the likelihood of a person knowing someone who died under these circumstances.

Just 4.9% of Republicans answered “yes,” while 14.8% of Democrats and 16.4% of independents answered “yes.”