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The Private Sector

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Title: The Private Sector


1
The Private Sector
  • Providing the Public Good
  • of Health Care
  • by
  • Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, Sheila T. Leatherman, and
    Kathleen N. Lohr
  • A presentation to the
  • American Politics Research Group
  • 31 January 2003

2
Acknowledgments
  • The authors time to develop this essay was
    supported by a Vice Presidential Award from the
    Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (grant no. 042467,
    Leatherman, PI).
  • We thank Ms. Starr L. Nicely and Ms. Sara E.
    Massie for their excellent research assistance.
  • Earlier versions of the present discussion were
    presented at the 2002 Midwest Political Science
    Association Annual Meeting, and in mss currently
    under review.

3
The Status Quo
  • The Institute of Medicine (IOM) says the health
    care system is broken this unusually strong
    language reflects a growing sense that the health
    care system is now imperiled in its ability to
    deliver care that is
  • Consistently high in quality
  • Equitable, available, and timely
  • Safe, effective, and ethical
  • While the system is, at the same time, riding
    the tiger of unplanned growth in the care that
    is possible through emerging new therapeutics and
    procedures, and thought to be necessary for a
    population replete with treatable chronic and
    acute conditions.

4
The Public Climate
  • Managed Care, for good or ill, was reviled by the
    public and elected officials alike death by a
    thousand anecdotes. But it was at least in
    principle a defensible means of coordinating care
    while rationalizing costs, and it was a genuine
    departure from the classic risk indemnity model
    of insurance. In its wake, no one wants to pay
    for what must replace some notion of managing
    care. For instance, in January 2003, 28,000 GE
    workers staged the first strike against the
    company in five decades over only 300-400
    annual increases in their out-of-pocket costs.
    Without letting GE and its stockholders off the
    hook, did GE workers pick the right battle?
  • We talk about and expect health insurance, as
    if we are insuring against the risk of ever
    needing health care, the way we insure against
    the risk of fire or theft. But the need for
    health care is a certainty a benefit -- not a
    hazard against which we can insure ourselves.
    And yet we are reluctant to talk about or plan
    for all the necessary choices (including ethical
    ones) that the availability of care engenders.
    Reinhardt among others says that all we do seem
    to want is all the health care that we and our
    doctors can possibly imagine, for free no tax
    increases, no out-of-pocket payments, just by
    magic while all the health sectors managers
    think first of all about the bottom line.

5
The status quo wont work
  • We say that without an EXPLICIT consensus that
    the delivery of health care is a part of the
    delivery of the public good, or the General
    Welfare, we cant find lasting, systemic
    solutions to any of these problems of the
    politics of health care the politics of
    providing high quality health care to all.
  • And make no mistake this IS about the politics,
    and not the economics, of health carebecause it
    is about hard choices that we as a system have so
    far been unwilling to confront -- our discourse
    must engage the politics of health care, not just
    the economics of it!

6
What WILL work?
  • The nation must have a robust, persuasive,
    accessible, and applicable conceptual framework
    for supporting the private sectors understanding
    of its special mission to deliver the public good
    of health care
  • The business case for quality, performance
    improvement, and effectiveness are already
    prevalent themes in the private health sector,
    but they have not yet been explicitly conflated
    with the public good
  • This is lots easier said than done!!

7
Conceptual Framing Tasks
  • Delivering a concise, clear-eyed picture of the
    nature of the real health system
  • Making the framework persuasive and usable for a
    diverse collection of audiences
  • Validating the framework
  • Distilling genuinely transformational strategies

8
The Clear-Eyed Picture
  • Perceptions
  • Cost and Access
  • Quality
  • Politics

9
Clear-eyed Picture Perceptions
  • Health care is widely viewed as consumer
    product delivered in a competitive private
    marketplace, and the public rather adamantly says
    that it does not want big government delivering
    it.
  • Despite this, since WWII, health care is more and
    more viewed as our right that is, we dont
    really think that health care is just like
    widgets, just another consumer commodity (Arrow
    cit in notes view said health care delivery was
    not widgets back in 1963, but he was thinking of
    the inability to achieve Pareto
    optimality/distribute risk and predictability,
    and the moral hazardsof it we would argue that
    the public differentiates health care from
    widgets for other reasons even if they cant
    articulate them).
  • The U.S. differs significantly from other western
    postindustrial nations, not so much in the mix of
    publicly v. privately provided health care, but
    in ideology and orientation our comparators
    more explicitly recognize health care as a part
    of the public good, and in which citizens are
    perhaps more likely to think of the communitys
    good, as well as about their own care.
  • As the public health sector is growing in the
    U.S., the private sectors are growing in our
    western comparators, so the simple private v.
    public frame is probably inadequate across the
    board in either place and all places struggle
    with providing high quality care to the greatest
    number while controlling costs.

10
Clear-Eyed Picture Cost and Access
  • Annual expenditures of gt 5000/person leading
    the world. Unless something changes drastically,
    and soon, health care expenditures will consume
    16 of GDP by 2010 that would be 2.6
    trillion/year
  • This enormous expenditure is not accompanied by
    the lifespan, health status, or quality of life
    improvements that you might expect
  • All employers (who offer health insurance) once
    again facing double-digit increases in premiums
  • Much variation in care (and expenditures for it)
    is not explained by differences in patient
    populations

11
Cost and Access, continued
  • Employer-sponsored premiums now exceed 7000/year
    for family coverage
  • -- and this is for people who HAVE insurance!
  • 46 million people in working families uninsured
    24.3 of the population of nonelderly families
    with wage earners. Their options?
  • Some may be eligible for some public programs
    such as SCHIP
  • Some may purchase insurance privately, at avg
    cost of 2000-4000/year for individuals
  • The plurality or majority? simply do without
    coverage

12
Clear-Eyed Picture Quality of Care
  • Quality of Care is the degree to which health
    services for individuals and populations
    increased the likelihood of desired health
    outcomes and are consistent with current
    professional knowledge (IOM 1990 21). It is
    often categorized (Chassin et al. 1998) in terms
    of
  • Underuse -- the failure to provide a health care
    service when it would have produced a favorable
    outcome for a patient
  • Overuse when a health care service is provided
    under circumstances in which its potential for
    harm exceeds the possible benefit or
  • Misuse when an appropriate service has been
    selected but a preventable complication occurs
    and the patient does not receive the full
    potential benefit of the service (these are the
    ones we hear the most about, because this
    category INCLUDES but is not limited to errors,
    or the avoidable complications of surgery or
    medication use)
  • and it can also be measured in terms of the
    degree to which quality of care contributes to
  • Patient satisfaction or patient experience of
    care, and
  • Health status and health-related quality of life

13
Quality of Care, continued
  • Recently, the IOM has said that the goal of the
    health system is to continually reduce the
    burden of illness, injury, and disability, and to
    improve the health and functioning of the people
    of the U.S, and it has illustrated the quality
    of care definition by saying that the components
    of quality are safety, effectiveness,
    patient-centeredness, and timeliness (IOM 2000
    2001).
  • The U.S. system is self-critical about, and is
    criticized by the rest of the world for,
    appearing not to achieve the level of quality of
    care one would expect given our level of
    expenditures (Leatherman and McCarthy 2002 WHO
    2000)
  • The controversial WHO report ranked the U.S. 1st
    in responsiveness but 54th in fairness, for
    example, and it ranked the U.S. 37th in the world
    on its much-debated overall Health System
    Performance index
  • Weve shown impressive improvements in things
    like immunization and cancer screening rates, but
    are still overusing antibiotics and underusing
    beta blockers and thrombolytics, to provide some
    common examples
  • At the same time, trust in the health care system
    is suffering declines similar to those found in
    trust of other institutions/sectors a new
    phenomenon

14
Clear-Eyed Picture Politics
  • DIRECT public subsidy of health care Medicare,
    Medicaid, SCHIP, VA Health System, payments to
    teaching hospitals, etc INDIRECT public
    subsidy, via tax incentives to private employers
    to subsidize health insurance a health care
    system that is 60 public/40 private
    (Woolhandler and Himmmelstein 2002) clearly,
    public and private are inextricable.
  • The U.S. private sector is large, wealthy, and
    politically effective (one example PhRMAs
    underwriting of United Seniors Association as a
    527 group for the purpose of lobbying against
    prescription drug benefit and supporting GOP
    congressional candidates in 2002)
  • The U.S. public sector, especially Medicare and
    health benefits for veterans, is, if troubled, at
    least still perceived as legitimate (SCHIP is too
    new to have established itself broadly in public
    opinion, and Medicaid probably shares the public
    skepticism with which welfare is viewed)
  • Given these, it is probably counterproductive to
    go on framing the debate as one of choosing
    between a fully private or a fully nationalized
    health system we will go on with our blended
    public/private hybrid for the foreseeable future
    (though that does not mean that we wont move to
    some kind of hybrid single-payer system)

15
Conceptual Framing Tasks
  • Delivering a concise, clear-eyed picture of the
    nature of the real health system
  • Making the framework persuasive and usable for a
    diverse collection of audiences
  • Validating the framework
  • Promoting genuinely transformational strategies

16
Persuasiveness and Usefulness
  • The framework must
  • be useful to
  • Health sector executives
  • Payers
  • Policymakers
  • The public
  • The framework must
  • be
  • Innovative
  • Coherent -- intelligible
  • Practical
  • Motivating and sustaining

17
Conceptual Framing Tasks
  • Delivering a concise, clear-eyed picture of the
    nature of the real health system
  • Making the framework persuasive and usable for a
    diverse collection of audiences
  • Validating the framework
  • Promoting genuinely transformational strategies

18
Validating the Framework
  • Turning to the experience of other sectors where
    the system has induced/coerced private entities
    to deliver the public good --
  • Education
  • Energy
  • Finance
  • Transportation
  • Conducting a Systematic Review of the literature
    on such interventions in the health care sector
    as well as in these other sectors to support the
    delivery of the public good in health care and
    the other sectors
  • see some bounding definitions on next slide

19
Some Definitions
  • Systematic Reviews are rigorous, highly
    structured reviews of the literature, upon which
    qualitative and quantitative analyses of the
    reviews findings are meant to establish
    authoritative conclusions about the efficacy and
    effectiveness of a given intervention, along with
    a thorough depiction of the interventions
    benefits (outcomes) and harms (in health services
    research, harms are regarded as undesired
    outcomes or risks). Systematic reviews are the
    foundation of
  • Evidence-based practice, the leading current
    Western paradigm or epistemology guiding clinical
    practice, defined as integration of best
    research evidence with clinical expertise and
    patient values and a diagnostic and
    therapeutic alliance which optimizes clinical
    outcomes and quality of life (Sackett et al.
    2000)

20
Sues partial and idiosyncratic mini-primer on
the politics of Evidence-based Practice
  • Medicine until recently was what physicians
    themselves called empirical or even empiric,
    and by that they mean something completely
    opposite to what the term means to social
    scientists. Empirical medicine is what we
    would characterize as qualitative, contextual, or
    case-history it is the body of wisdom or common
    practice propounded pedagogically, or through
    uncontrolled experimentation and adaptation on
    the part of a given practitioner. This seems to
    work for my patients, or This was the way I was
    trained, describe empirical medicine
    practice not grounded in scientific evidence. In
    fact, because the health sciences tend to regard
    randomized controlled trials (RCTs) as the gold
    standard, and because most medical practice is
    not amenable to investigation by RCTs, most (some
    say over 80) of medical therapies and procedures
    remain empirical that is, utterly unempirical
    as we would understand the word -- untested or
    unevaluated via the scientific method.
  • The lack of evidence for empirical medical
    practice leaves it open to bias in observation,
    spurious assumptions of causation, and at least
    the possibility that common practice or the
    accepted wisdom is simply WRONG in short,
    empirical medicine is prey to all the dangers
    of unevaluated practice of which you can think.
    A Scots epidemiologist, Archie Cochrane, made it
    his lifes work to make medicine evidence-based
    that is, to build a foundation of high
    quality evidence (specifically, from RCTs) upon
    which standard medical practice would be based.
  • The evidence base is, of course, problematic,
    because it remains true that we dont HAVE
    evidence for a tremendous amount of medical
    care and, for reasons of cost, methodology,
    ethics, and investigator interests, we probably
    wont ever have evidence in Cochranes terms
    for much of what transpires when a patient seeks
    care. With regard to that for which we do have
    evidence, the evidence changes as additional
    research is done, or as time passes, or both
    think of it as trying to find a single small set
    of variables that explains all the variance in
    both the 1996 and 2000 presidential elections,
    and you get the idea! Or think of the HRT and
    mammography flaps in the past year

21
Idiosyncratic primer, continued
  • Nonetheless, few could argue with Cochranes
    central point medicine ought not to be
    practiced in the absence of any concern for the
    evidence behind it. Cochranes beliefs would be
    reified -- by people like Sackett, quoted on a
    previous slide, who originally defined
    evidence-based medicine as the conscientious,
    explicit, and judicious use of current best
    evidence in making decisions about the care of
    individual patients with, initially, poor
    acceptance by physicians, many of whom felt that
    they were being told that their clinical judgment
    and experience were worth nothing, to be replaced
    by cookbook medicine. Patients and other health
    professionals were also wary because the early
    definitions seemed very autocratic and
    hierarchical, enshrining the physician and
    ignoring other players. And evidence-based
    approaches were expanding to other professional
    and clinical fields. Hence we have arrived at
    a softer and more elastic definition, and the
    current preference for evidence-based practice
    rather than evidence-based medicine.
  • More people also recognize, of course, that one
    cannot treat evidence from RCTs as the only
    standard. Much debate revolves around the use of
    nonexperimental, observational studies and data
    as a legitimate part of the knowledge base

22
Idiosyncratic primer, continued
  • Acceptance of Cochranes ideas was made much
    easier by the fact that the Clinical Practice
    Guidelines, Outcomes, Effectiveness, and Quality
    of Care movements were already gaining tremendous
    conceptual ground among scholars, policymakers,
    and clinicians. These movements also assumed a
    systematic concatenation of evidence and
    evaluation. I cannot do justice to these
    converging movements in this space, but I do want
    to convey to you how much of a revolution the
    ideas of quality of care, outcomes, and
    effectiveness created in the way we think of
    health services delivery and financing, and how
    much the idea of Guidelines altered the average
    physicians awareness of her day-to-day practice.
  • The present task makes referring to the evidence
    base particularly important for three reasons
  • Part of the persuasiveness of our framework will
    be its use of paradigmatic concepts that the
    current health policy community, from payers to
    providers to policymakers -- has already
    embraced and can understand.
  • We WANT to learn from the evidence in health and
    the other sectors to the extent that any part
    of the private sector is imbued with a sense of
    mission to deliver the public good, how was it
    stimulated and sustained?
  • This is also simple strategy we dont hold out
    much hope for being able to convince the private
    sector to engage in some pretty dramatic
    re-thinking just because it is the right thing to
    do. We must make a business case for it, and
    the private sector respects evidence as a
    reason to change the way it does things.

23
US Population
Analytic Framework for Evidence Report
(Systematic Review) on Potential Transformational
Strategies for Changing Private Sector
Performance to Deliver the Public Good
Interventions To Improve Health Care System
Performance Leadership Regulatory and
Legal Incentives (financial and
nonfinancial) Educational
Outcomes/Results of Interventions Quality (Pro
cesses and outcomes of of care health status
safety patient/provider satisfaction) Cost
(to public sector, citizens, employers) Access
(to providers and services) Patient Experience
of Care Population-based Outcomes Trust in
System Genuine Policy Change
  • Health
  • Care
  • In the
  • Private
  • Sector

Harms and Adverse Unintended Consequences
Screening and prevention, diagnosis, treatment,
rehabilitation, palliation
24
Conceptual Framing Tasks
  • Delivering a concise, clear-eyed picture of the
    nature of the real health system
  • Making the framework persuasive and usable for a
    diverse collection of audiences
  • Validating the framework
  • Promoting genuinely transformational strategies

25
Transformational Strategies
  • With a debt to James McGregor Burns, we really
    are looking for transformational strategies the
    system is already awash in transactional ones.
  • And yet they must seem doable, usable not
    dewy-eyed. We need ways of fostering practical
    idealism.

26
Levers of Change
SOURCE Adapted from Leatherman, 2002
27
Levers of Change, continued
SOURCE Adapted from Leatherman, 2002
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