A cross-sectional study of social inequities in medical crowdfunding campaigns in the United States
Nora Kenworthy, Zhihang Dong, Anne Montgomery, Emily Fuller, Lauren, Berliner

TL;DR
This study investigates social inequities in medical crowdfunding campaigns in the US, revealing systemic disparities in campaign use and success based on race, gender, and age, highlighting potential exacerbation of health inequities.
Contribution
It provides the first empirical analysis of demographic disparities in medical crowdfunding outcomes using a large, randomized sample of campaigns.
Findings
Non-white users are under-represented in campaigns.
Women organizers face a digital care labor burden.
Marginalized groups have poorer fundraising outcomes.
Abstract
Americans are increasingly relying on crowdfunding to pay for the costs of healthcare. In medical crowdfunding, online platforms allow individuals to appeal to social networks to request donations for health and medical needs. Users are often told that success depends on how they organize and share their campaigns to increase social network engagement. However, experts have cautioned that MCF could exacerbate health and social disparities by amplifying the choices and biases of the crowd and leveraging these to determine who has access to financial support for healthcare. To date, research on potential axes of disparity in MCF, and their impacts on fundraising outcomes, has been limited. This paper presents an exploratory cross-sectional study of a randomized sample of 637 MCF campaigns on the popular platform Gofundme, for which the race, gender, age, and relationships of campaigners…
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