TY - JOUR AU - Card,David AU - Dobkin,Carlos AU - Maestas,Nicole TI - Does Medicare Save Lives? JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 13668 PY - 2007 Y2 - November 2007 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w13668 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w13668.pdf N1 - Author contact info: David Card Department of Economics 549 Evans Hall, #3880 University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-3880 Tel: 510/642-5222 Fax: 510/643-7042 E-Mail: card@econ.berkeley.edu Carlos Dobkin Department of Economics University of California, Santa Cruz 1156 High Street Santa Cruz, CA 95064 Tel: 831/459-2079 Fax: 831/459-5077 E-Mail: cdobkin@ucsc.edu Nicole Maestas RAND Corporation 1776 Main Street P.O. Box 2138 Santa Monica, CA 90407-2138 E-Mail: Nicole_Maestas@rand.org AB - The health insurance characteristics of the population changes sharply at age 65 as most people become eligible for Medicare. But do these changes matter for health? We address this question using data on over 400,000 hospital admissions for people who are admitted through the emergency room for "non-deferrable" conditions -- diagnoses with the same daily admission rates on weekends and weekdays. Among this subset of patients there is no discernible rise in the number of admissions at age 65, suggesting that the severity of illness is similar for patients on either side of the Medicare threshold. The insurance characteristics of the two groups are much different, however, with a large jump at 65 in the fraction who have Medicare as their primary insurer, and a reduction in the fraction with no coverage. These changes are associated with significant increases in hospital list chargers, in the number of procedures performed in hospital, and in the rate that patients are transferred to other care units in the hospital. We estimate a nearly 1 percentage point drop in 7-day mortality for patients at age 65, implying that Medicare eligibility reduces the death rate of this severely ill patient group by 20 percent. The mortality gap persists for at least two years following the initial hospital admission. ER -