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Amish Paradise: Living Uninsured But Healthy In Rural Ohio

There are more than 35,000 Amish people living in Holmes County, Ohio.
Paige Pfleger
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星空无限传媒
There are more than 35,000 Amish people living in Holmes County, Ohio.

Holmes County is a patchwork of farmland. Modest houses perch on sloping hills and laundry hangs from clothes lines, flapping in the wind.

Around nearly every bend in the road are horses and buggies 鈥� some driven by farmers in straw hats, others by women with their hair covered in bonnets, babies on their laps.

Holmes is one of in Ohio. It鈥檚 also : according to the census, more than 20% of the population does not have health insurance. Holmes County estimates that number is closer to 40%. That鈥檚 in large part because of the Amish population.

Holmes is projected to be the first county in the United States where over half the population is Amish. And the Amish don鈥檛 participate in the U.S. health insurance system.

鈥淚nsurance is more for your own benefit," says Dan Yoder. "The aid plan is when all the church members get together and they try to help everybody else. Not for their own benefits."

Yoder is a member of the Amish community in Holmes. He pays all the medical bills for his church members and surrounding churches, too, using a fund that everyone contributes to. It costs between $90 and $110 a month per member to participate, what's called a "self-pay" model.

鈥淲e have some exemption in promising to the state and the government that we will take care of our own people, so we don鈥檛 need the insurance,鈥� Yoder says.

Credit Paige Pfleger / 星空无限传媒
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A horse and buggy drive through Holmes County, the heart of Ohio's Amish settlement.

The Amish community doesn't participate in Medicare or Medicaid, either. Yoder even negotiates with health providers the way an insurance company would to get lower prices for medical care. Often he can secure discounts because they pay all their bills immediately.

鈥淥ur health providers will never have a bill that is more than 10 days old,鈥� Yoder says, 鈥渧ersus when the insurance company works with health providers on health care, you鈥檙e talking about 8 months to a year before the providers get payment.鈥�

But despite the lack of traditional insurance, the Amish tend to be healthier than their non-Amish neighbors, from Holmes County.

鈥淗olmes County is very proud of the fact that we鈥檙e number one in the state for our environmental factors. That鈥檚 because we use a lot of alternate means of transportation 鈥� we see a lot of bicycles, we see a lot of horse and buggy,鈥� says Michael Derr, head of the Holmes County Public Health Department.

Credit Paige Pfleger / 星空无限传媒
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Michael Derr is the head of the public health department in Holmes County.

Derr says those modes of transportation can help with a more active lifestyle and contribute less to pollution. But it can also make it difficult for the Amish to reach health care providers. More than half the population goes elsewhere for care, because the rural county doesn鈥檛 offer the necessary services.

鈥淭o bring in the different providers, that would take that full gamut of Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance," Derr says. "Self pay, it鈥檚 really hard to attract those physicians into the community."

There鈥檚 only one hospital in Holmes County, and it accepts all forms of insurance, including the Amish fund.

There are also nearby Amish-dedicated clinics, like the New Leaf Center. Every year, church members are asked to donate $30 to the clinic. It specializes in treating children with genetic diseases 鈥� like cystic fibrosis or Down syndrome - that are more frequent in the Amish community because of its relatively small genetic pool.

A buggy on the side of the road in Holmes County, Ohio.
Credit Paige Pfleger / 星空无限传媒
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星空无限传媒
A buggy on the side of the road in Holmes County, Ohio.

鈥淭here鈥檚 very few rooms that I walk out of that we haven鈥檛 had some discussion about what the cost and what the estimated bill to the family and the church is going to be,鈥� says Ethan Scott, a pediatrician at the New Leaf Center. 鈥淪o you have to be willing to be very transparent, and that is a huge contrast to most health care systems.鈥�

Scott says that transparency is a positive part of the Amish system, but he says patients can struggle with the fact that money for their health care is coming out of their neighbor鈥檚 pocket.

鈥淲e do see families really grapple with the burden that they鈥檙e going to potentially be with their community at large,鈥� Scott says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty rare that we鈥檒l sit down with a family here the first time and lay out treatment options and that they will consent the first time. They鈥檒l usually tell us they need to go speak with their grandparents, maybe bishops at their church.鈥�

He says in many cases, the church fund will raise money for expensive procedures like bone marrow transplants.

In other cases, however, the group decides the possible benefits for one patient aren鈥檛 worth the cost to the whole community.

Paige Pfleger is a former reporter for 星空无限传媒, Central Ohio's NPR station. Before joining the staff of 星空无限传媒, Paige worked in the newsrooms of NPR, Vox, Michigan Radio, WHYY and The Tennessean. She spent three years in Philadelphia covering health, science, and gender, and her work has appeared nationally in The Washington Post, Marketplace, Atlas Obscura and more.
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