Title: The Relevance of Drug Policy to Health Care Administration
1The Relevance of Drug Policy to Health Care
Administration
- John B. White, David Duncan1,
- Patricia Minors, Tom Nicholson
1Brown University School of Medicine
2Budget Crisis Impacts
- A recent estimate of state budget shortfalls for
the 2003 fiscal year is approximately 70 billion
dollars. - Many states have targeted reimbursement for child
health insurance programs, mental health
services, and substance abuse treatment programs
for cuts - Resources for substance abuse treatment and
prevention are likely to shrink rather than grow.
3Substance Abuse Treatment
- In 1995, there were 114 billion dollars spent on
all health care costs associated with substance
abuse - Almost 20 of all Medicaid hospital costs, and
nearly 1 of every 4 Medicare spends on
inpatient hospital care, is associated with
substance abuse. (RWJ, 2001)
4Location of Drug Treatment
- Drug users make more than 527,000 visits to
emergency rooms each year for drug-related
problems - Community based centers account for 22 of
alcohol and 31 of drug direct health care costs.
5Drug Policy Influences
- Funding
- Organization of treatment resources
- Epidemiology of drug-related behavior
6Funding
- As reimbursement for substance abuse care
decreases, demand for alternative treatment will
increase (e.g., inappropriate use of emergency
room) - Episodic treatment is not effective in reducing
the number of abusers and results in greater
numbers of drug-related infections, injuries, and
deaths
7Funding Institutional Costs
- Unreimbursed treatment for substance abuse
- Inappropriate use of
- Emergency
- Admissions
- Social services
- Medical information systems
- Administration
- Increased mortality and morbidity as an indicator
of quality
8Funding Health System Costs
- Continued emphasis on acute episodic treatment
rather than long-term prevention and care
management - Increased sequelae such as gangrene, HIV,
syphilis, Hepatitis-C, and others - Thus, increased costs to the health care system
longitudinally over the life of an abuser treated
episodically
9Organization
- Employee drug testing
- EAP
- Control Systems
- Security
- Shrinkage
- MAR/Documentation of treatment
- Capital Costs (e.g., PIXIS, pharmacy information
systems)
10Organization Staffing
- More patients, less net revenue, nursing
shortage - provider/patient ratio
- increased turnover rates
- increased stress (employees and system)
- Trained/Certified in substance abuse screening
and treatment
11Organization Confidentiality
- HIPPA 42 CFR (Part 2)
- Identification of drug seekers
- Stringent protection on medical records related
to treatment - Compliance
12Organization Delivery or Enforcement?
- Patient consent to testing (Ferguson v. City of
Charleston) - Avoid seeking treatment for illicit substance
abuse
13Epidemiology
- Prohibition policy limits range of responses to
substance abuse problems - Policies disproportionately impact lower SES and
persons of color - Prohibition policy has created the most
profitable black market in the world (150 to 400
Billion US)
14Epidemiology Limited Responses
- Controversy over needle exchange programs
- Inadequate pain management for nursing home
residents and chronically ill patients - No Heroin maintenance
- Emphasis on Abstinence Only programs
- Medicalization of normal drug experimentation
15Epidemiology Minorities
- Treatment for the rich, jail for the poor
- More black males in prison than in college
- US represents 3 of the worlds population but we
account for 25 of all incarcerated people in the
world
16Epidemiology Black Market
- Cocaine is more profitable than gold
- Black market creates institutionalized violence
(protection of territory, robbery, etc) - Black market bypasses governments ability to
regulate (such as quality), tax, and control
(e.g., age limits)
17HCA Education Finance
- Financial models based on classic cost accounting
(e.g., Cleverly or Gapenskis texts) lack
emphasis on collecting societal costs - Activity based cost accounting (e.g., Baker)
allows capture but is costly to implement and
maintain
18HCA Education Legal
- Emphasis in many texts on the delivery of care
and contractual obligations - HIPPA and 42 CFR part 2 are not sufficiently
covered in extant texts
19HCA Education Management
- Presentation of classic management theory
dominates texts with little exploration of
innovative alternatives - Human Resources/Staffing
- Planning/Marketing
- Supervisory Training
20HCA Education Suggestions
- Look at other successful models
- Industry (e.g., Lean management)
- Public administration
- Governance
- Incorporation of drug policy cases into
management curricula
21HCA Education Suggestions
- Recognition of importance of organizational
cultures and their interactions - Using epidemiological information in planning
(e.g., rates of abuse in community) - Recognition of diverse risks associated with
different subpopulations, including the
population of health care providers
22HCA Education Suggestions
- Greater creativity in assets management and funds
allocation to support drug treatment - Statesmanship addressing needs of patients,
providers, and society for appropriate drug
treatment as opposed to episodic, fragmented
encounters
23Drug policy formulation, implementation, and
impact provide an excellent case study of how
funding, organization, and delivery of health
care services interrelate with social, political,
and economic forces.