Title: Are Rising Health Care Costs Inevitable
1Are Rising Health Care Costs Inevitable?
- Vivian Ho
- James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy
- Department of Economics, Rice University
- Department of Medicine, Baylor College of
Medicine - Wednesday, March 26, 2008
22.1 Trillion
2006
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
Source CMS, National Health Accounts
316.0
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2006
Source CMS, National Health Accounts
47,018
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2006
Source CMS, National Health Accounts
5Expenditures are Highly Concentrated
Source Lieberman, et. Al. Health Affairs 2003,
Medicare Expenditures 1995-1999.
6Source KFF/HRET Employer Health Benefits 2006
Annual Survey
7Source U.S Census Bureau. Income, Poverty, and
Health Insurance Coverage in the United States
2006
8Source Rosen, et. Al. Health Affairs 2007, The
Value of Coronary Heart Disease Care for the
Elderly1987-2002.
9Source Rosen, et. Al. Health Affairs 2007, The
Value of Coronary Heart Disease Care for the
Elderly1987-2002.
10We must restrain costs in order to increase
access to care.
- Inefficiencies in the health care delivery.
- Paying providers for quality, not quantity.
- Take a global approach to public health.
11(No Transcript)
12Dartmouth Atlas
- Differences in partly due to differences in
health status. - Large diffs persist after controlling for
health and socioeconomic status. - e.g. heart disease, cancer, income, education,
poor health habits. - What drives these diffs, and does it improve
survival or quality of life?
13Physician Visits per Decedent During Last 6
Months of Life (1995-1996)
By definition, MD visits in last 6 months of life
dont improve survival but regional variation
is large.
Source www.dartmouth.atlas.org Wennberg and
Cooper, 1999.
14Dartmouth Atlas
- Many Americans are receiving costly health care
services which provide no value in terms of
improved health status. - 26 billion in Medicare expenditures has no
measurable effect on survival or quality of life.
15Solution
- Develop new methods to identify and promote best
practice guidelines. - Health informatics
- Regulation?
- Market Reform?
- Reimbursement reform
16Reform Medicare Reimbursement
- Align the incentives of health care providers
with those of the elderly needing care. - CMS reimburses hospitals and physicians fixed
prices for each unit of care. - e.g. Hospitals are reimbursed 9000 for a
patient with DRG 209, total hip replacement.
17Reform Medicare Reimbursement
- Reimbursement rates well above costs lead to high
profits. - High profits encourage distortionary care.
- e.g. cardiac care
- Reimbursement below costs leads to
under-provision of care.
18Reform Medicare Reimbursement
- Align reimbursements with the marginal cost of
providing care. - Reimburse providers based on qualitynot
quantity. - Congestive heart failure
- Blood pressure control
19Global Approach to Population Health
- Obesity, diabetes, and cancer.
- Invest in preventing the root causes of our
illnesses. - Does it make sense to spend public funds to treat
Medicare patients for treatment of obesity?
20Source KE Thorpe, DH Howard Health Affairs 2006
21Source KE Thorpe, DH Howard Health Affairs 2006
22Source KE Thorpe et. al. Health Affairs 2007
23Source KE Thorpe et. al. Health Affairs 2007
24Global Approach to Population Health
- Increased education can improve health status.
- An additional year of schooling lowers the
probability of dying in the next 10 years by 3.6
percentage points. - In the long run, increased education may be more
cost-effective than tertiary care in improving
population health.
25Global Approach to Population Health
- Federal agricultural subsidies lower the cost of
ingredients used in high-calorie processed foods. - Fats and oils receive 20 times more agricultural
subsidies than fruits and vegetables. - Realign subsidies to encourage production and
consumption of healthy foods.
26Global Approach to Population Health
- Cities and transportation system designs
discourage walking, cycling, and other forms of
exercise. - Investing extra resources in urban planning and
public transportation may improve public health
status, reducing health care costs.
27- Which candidate would promote competition among
providers by paying them only for quality and
promote use of alternative providers (e.g. nurse
practitioners) and treatment settings (e.g.
walk-in clinics in retail outlets)? - Clinton
- McCain
- Obama
28- Which candidate would require health insurance
plans to disclose the percentage of their
premiums that actually goes to paying for patient
care as opposed to administrative costs? - Clinton
- McCain
- Obama
29- Which candidate would establish an independent
Best Practices Institute to help consumers and
other purchasers and plans make the right care
choices? - Clinton
- McCain
- Obama
30How Do We Pay for All of This?
- Which candidate would no longer allow a deduction
for employer-provided health insurance? - Clinton
- McCain
- Obama
Clinton would limit the tax exclusion for
households earning gt 250,000. The average cost
of employer-provided family health insurance is
now 12,000 a year
31- Which candidate has the highest projected costs
for health care reform? - Clinton
- McCain
- Obama
Price tag for health care reform is 110b a year.
Half will be financed by savings from quality
and modernization initiatives, Medicare
Medicaid changes, and constraining prescription
drug costs.
32- Which candidate would pay for health care reform
by discontinuing tax cuts for those with incomes
over 250,000? - Clinton
- McCain
- Obama
Every 1 increase in tax rates for the wealthiest
only raises 6 billion.
33Conclusion
- We live in a remarkable new age.
- New technologies
- Longer life expectancy, better quality of life.
- Our health care system delivers care in an
inefficient, costly, inequitable manner. - We must consider dramatic reforms in the way we
deliver health care, insurance coverage, and
population health.