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Problems of the American Health Care System

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Problems of the American Health Care System 1. Lack of Health Insurance Coverage for 47 Million People 2. High Cost of Health Care 3. Growth in the Costs of Health Care – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Problems of the American Health Care System


1
Problems of the American Health Care System
  • 1. Lack of Health Insurance Coverage for
  • 47 Million People
  • 2. High Cost of Health Care
  • 3. Growth in the Costs of Health Care
  • 4. Quality of the Health of Americans

2
Total Health Expenditures Per Capita, 2003

3
Total Health Care Expenditures as a Share of GDP,
2003
4
Infant Mortality and Life Expectancy, 2007
  • Infant Deaths Per 1,000 Births Life
    Expectancy at Birth
  • Australia 4.6
    80.6
  • Austria 4.5
    79.2
  • Canada 4.6
    80.3
  • Chile 8.4
    77.0
  • Denmark 4.5
    78.0
  • Finland 3.5
    78.7
  • France 4.2
    79.9
  • Germany 4.1
    79.0
  • Ireland 5.2
    77.9
  • Italy 5.7
    79.9
  • Japan 3.2
    81.4
  • New Zealand 5.7
    79.0
  • Norway 3.6
    79.7
  • Spain 4.3
    79.8
  • Sweden 2.8
    80.6
  • Switzerland 4.3
    80.6
  • United Kingdom 5.0
    78.7
  • United States 6.4
    78.0

5
The Cost of a Long Life
6
World Health Organization Ranking of Health Care
Systems
  • 1. France
    11. Norway
  • 2. Italy
    12. Portugal
  • 3. San Marino
    13. Monaco
  • 4. Andorra
    14. Greece
  • 5. Malta
    15. Iceland
  • 6. Singapore
    16. Luxembourg
  • 7. Spain
    17. Netherlands
  • 8. Oman
    18. United Kingdom
  • 9. Austria
    19. Ireland
  • 10. Japan
    20. Switzerland

  • 41 USA

7
Why Have Health Care Costs Increased So Greatly?
  • Demand for Health Care Has Been Rising
  • 1. Rising Incomes
  • 2. Aging of the Population
  • 3. Unhealthy Lifestyles
  • 4. More Health Care Services Are Provided
  • a. Fee-for Service
  • b. Medical Malpractice
  • 5. Increased Insurance Coverage
  • Costs of Providing Health Care Have Been Rising
  • 1. Some Restrictions on the Number of
    Physicians
  • 2. Slow Growth in Worker Productivity
  • 3. Tremendous Technological Advances
  • Between 1/3 and ½ of the increase in health care
    costs can be explained by rising incomes, the
    aging population, the increased insurance
    coverage. And the slow worker productivity
    growth. The rest is explained by the high cost
    of medical advances.

8
Why Do People Have Health Insurance?
  • 1. Health Problems Can Be Random Events That Can
    Cause Great Financial Hardship
  • 2. People are Risk Averse
  • 3. The Tax Law A 126 Billion Tax
  • Break

9
Why Must All Employees Be Covered by Health
Insurance?
  • 1. Adverse Selection
  • 2. Asymmetric Information
  • 3. The Lemons Principle

10
Inefficiencies Caused by Health Insurance
  • 1. Moral Hazard
  • 2. Increased Demand for Health Care
  • Services
  • 3. May Prevent People From Changing Jobs
    and Prevent Employers From
  • Hiring Older Workers

11
Why is Health Care Different From Food?
  • 1. Supplier-induced demand
  • 2. Health Insurance
  • 3. Insufficient Competition
  • A. Physicians
  • B. Hospitals
  • C. Pharmaceutical Companies
  • 4. Externalities

12
The British National Health Service
  • 1. Treatment is decided by doctors
  • 2. Health care is mostly tax financed and mostly
    free.
  • 3. Little use of fee-for service
  • 4. Health care is explicitly rationed because an
    overall budget limits the amount of service that
    can be provided
  • 5. One of the cheapest systems spending about
    7 of GDP (c.f. 16 for the USA)
  • 6. Yet the British population is as healthy as
    the American population.

13
British General Practitioners
  • 1. Each person registers with a GP. One is free
    to choose his or her GP and to change GPs.
  • 2. GPs are self-employed.
  • 3. Most of their money comes from a Family
    Health Authority. It gets its money from the NHS
    budget.
  • 4. The doctor is paid a capitation fee an
    allowance to run the practice.
  • 5. An average GP earned about 200,000 per year
    in 2007. Half earned more than this.
  • 6. The patient pays nothing for doctor visits or
    home visits.
  • 7. For a major problem, the GP refers the
    patient to a specialist.

14
British Hospitals
  • 1. Hospital doctors are all specialists. They
    are government employees and receive a salary.
    They earn more than GPs. There is no
    fee-for-service.
  • 2. All hospital treatment is free to the
    patient.
  • 3. Hospitals are self-governing bodies run by
    their own board.
  • 4. The NHS gets most of its funding from general
    taxes. This is allocated to District Health
    Authorities. These can buy health care from any
    hospital in any area. This is designed to create
    greater competition and therefore increase
    efficiency.

15
Advantages of the British Health Care System
  • 1. Incentives to economize and not over-supply
    health care.
  • 2. NHS is inexpensive by international
    standards. Because there is no billing of
    patients, only 3 of health care spending goes
    for administration, compared to about 25 in the
    USA.
  • 3. Avoids the problems of private health
    insurance such as adverse selection and moral
    hazard.
  • 4. Because health care is free, earlier
    diagnosis is more likely.
  • 5. Variation in the quality and quantity of
    treatment received by people at different income
    levels is smaller than in the USA.
  • 6. No one in Britain fears that and illness will
    cause financial ruin!

16
Problems of the British Health Care System
  • 1. Too few resources are devoted to NHS. Much
    equipment is old and out-of date.
  • 2. There are long waiting times.
  • 3. The Brain Drain leads to reliance on
    foreign trained doctors.
  • 4. Inefficiency and inflexibility of a
    government bureaucracy.

17
Recent British Government Responses
  • 1. Funding for the NHS approximately doubled
    between 1997 and 2005.
  • 2. Pay for physicians has increased.
  • 3. Introduction of market elements and
    competition.
  • 4. No one of any political party has proposed
    eliminating the NHS!

18
Similarities of Canadian and British Health Care
  • 1. Universal Coverage
  • 2. Public Funding through Taxes
  • 3. People do not pay for essential health
    services. There are no deductibles or
    co-payments. Therefore, there is much less
    paperwork.

19
Similarities of Canadian and American Health Care
Systems
  • 1. Most doctors are in private practice.
  • a. Doctors are paid on a fee-for-service
    basis
  • b. Fees are negotiated with the province.
  • c. Doctors cannot bill the patient above
    the negotiated fees.
  • 2. Hospitals are non-profit organizations run by
    their own boards.
  • 3. There is significant use of private
    insurance, mostly received through employment.
    This covers non-essential services. About 30
    of health care costs are paid privately.

20
Advantages and Disadvantages of the Canadian
System
  • Advantages
  • 1. Lower cost than in the U.S.
  • a. Advantages of being a monopsony
  • buyer
  • 2. Better health outcomes than the U.S.
  • Disadvantages
  • 1. Long waiting times
  • 2. Low number of doctors and nurses
  • 3. Decrease in spending by the national
  • government
  • 4. Equipment is in need of replacement.
    Technology
  • can be out-of-date. Innovation is
    lacking.

21
Proposals to Lower Health Care Costs
  • 1.Increase Deductibles and Co-Payments
  • 2.Preferred Provider Organizations (PPO)
  • 3.Health Maintenance Organization (HMO)
  • a. Fixed Fee Per Employee
  • b. Doctors Are Salaried
  • c. Restricted Choice
  • d. Must Be Referred to a Specialist

22
Proposals to Provide Access
  • 1. Tax Credits
  • 2. Pay or Play (Mandates)
  • 3. Single Payer

23
Hillary Clinton Proposals
  • 1. Individual Mandate Requires Everyone to
    Have Health Insurance
  • A. Large Businesses Are Expected to
  • Provide Coverage
  • B. Small Businesses Get Tax Credits
  • to Help Them Pay for Coverage
  • C. Individuals Also Get Tax Credits
  • D. Insurance Pools
  • 2. If Happy, People Can Keep the Plan They
  • Now Have
  • 3. Insurance Companies Would Have to Accept All
  • 4. Emphasis on Prevention to Hold Down Costs
  • 5. Use of Computer Technology to Reduce Costs
  • 6. Best Practices Institute
  • 7. Medicare to Negotiate Pharmaceutical Drug
    Prices
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