Crowdfunding for health care isn't a real safety net – Futurity: Research News

Crowdfunding for health care isn't a real safety net - Futurity: Research News

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People in states with higher medical debt and lower rates of insurance coverage are more likely to try to raise money for health care through crowdfunding but less likely to succeed, research finds.

This so-called safety net isn’t much of one at all, say the researchers.

“We tend to think of crowdfunding as something that can help out anyone in hard times, but this data really indicates that where people need the most help paying for health care, crowdfunding provides the least help,” says Nora Kenworthy, associate professor of nursing and health studies at the University of Washington, Bothell.

“Relying on marketplace-based solutions only deepens already steep health inequalities.”

For the study in the American Journal of Public Health, the researchers collected data from more than 437,000 GoFundMe campaigns over a five-year period and analyzed, at the county and state level, crowdfunding use and outcomes. With the help of Census data and other information, Kenworthy and coauthor Mark Igra, a graduate student in sociology, assessed how many campaigns started, and how much money they raised, in areas with more or less income, medical debt, and health insurance coverage.

The researchers have explored various angles of crowdfunding—who uses it, where they live, and how successful their campaigns are. Last year, Igra and Kenworthy focused on crowdfunding during the first several months of the COVID-19 pandemic and found that campaigns were more successful in wealthier and more educated communities, a trend they attributed not just to financial resources available in such communities, but also to potentially wider—and wealthier—social networks. Igra and Kenworthy also found that 90% of campaigns, regardless of location, failed to meet their goals.

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For this study, the researchers wanted to examine medical crowdfunding, and the extent to which it helps people who struggle to pay for health care in the US. On GoFundMe, which holds the majority of the crowdfunding market in the US, more than one-third of campaigns are related to health care. GoFundMe reports more than 250,000 campaigns to finance medical needs are started each year, raising more than $650 million. The study amassed one of the largest, publicly available datasets of GoFundMe campaigns in recent years, from 2016 through 2020, and demonstrated that more campaigns were started in low-income and under-insured communities, but campaigns in more affluent communities with higher rates of insurance coverage raise substantially more money. Among other findings:

Over that five-year period, the 437,596 campaigns in GoFundMe’s “medical, illness, and healing” category raised more than $2 billion, with the median campaign earning just under $2,000.
During that period, 16% of campaigns raised nothing, while less than 12% met their goal.
Median numbers of donations and returns declined over time, hitting their lowest in 2020.
In 2020, just under 18% of campaigns were started in areas with the highest household income bracket (between $73,000 and $130,000), but accounted for more than one-fourth of total money raised.
That same year, 20% of campaigns were launched in the lowest income bracket ($19,000 to $47,000), accounting for 12% of total earnings. This is less than half of the earnings of the high-income bracket.

Similarly, there were more campaigns in states with higher percentages of people with medical debt and without insurance. Those campaigns raised less money than campaigns in other states. Mississippi, for example, has the highest percentage of the population with medical debt and is among the highest in percentage of uninsured, but crowdfunding campaigns there raised the least money of all 50 states.

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In examining 2020 data—the last full year available—researchers say one statistic stood out: 33.8% of campaigns were unfunded. The percentage varied so much from that of previous years, when the portion ranged from 0 to 4%, that researchers believe the pandemic alone wasn’t the cause. Rather, it appears more successful campaigns remain on the website longer, and thus previous years’ data may over-represent successful campaigns. In addition, unfunded campaigns appear to be removed from the site, either by the campaign creators or the website moderators, after one year, the researchers say.

“Because the campaigns people see on social networks are almost always the small subset that are shared widely, the public may have the impression that crowdfunding is more likely to be successful than it really is,” Igra says.

Greater transparency from all crowdfunding companies would allow more research and policymaking that could help address the very needs that crowdfunding purports to address, the researchers say. While thousands of people turn to crowdfunding to pay their medical bills, the study’s findings point to a more equitable and comprehensive solution: better health insurance coverage and social assistance programs.

“Relying on marketplace-based solutions only deepens already steep health inequalities. This research underscores the need for broader safety net programs that provide help to all those who need it,” Kenworthy says.

Funding for the research came from the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, through the UW Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology.

Source: University of Washington

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