1.24k likes | 1.48k Vues
Health Care Reform Now! What Will it Take to Improve the System? 2008 NNPHI Annual Conference. George C. Halvorson Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Kaiser Permanente May 15, 2008. Kaiser Permanente. -- 8.5 million members -- $35,000,000,000 in revenue -- 165,000 employees
E N D
Health Care Reform Now! What Will it Take to Improve the System?2008 NNPHI Annual Conference George C. Halvorson Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Kaiser Permanente May 15, 2008
Kaiser Permanente • -- 8.5 million members • -- $35,000,000,000 in revenue • -- 165,000 employees • -- Hospitals, pharmacies, clinics, imaging centers, etc.
Ideally, care delivery and care financing should be closely synchronized --even choreographed -- as reform efforts
Most reformers focus on one or the other -- with “financing” getting the most attention most of the time
We definitely need key elements of financing reform • Several approaches make sense: • (Universal Coverage -- Individual mandates -- Guaranteed issue -- Subsidized coverage for low income people)
We need to learn how other industrialized countries have achieved universal coverage -- • with a focus on the relevance of key European systems to American care and coverage approaches
BUT -- • Financing reform without care delivery reform would be a major operational and economic error
Health care cost increases are the major reason we need health care reform
Care delivery in the U.S. is uncoordinated, unfocused, inconsistent, unmeasured, extremely inefficient, perversely incented, excessively expensive and sometimes dangerous.
Health care delivery is, however, the fastest growing and most profitable segment of the whole U.S. economy
As an industry -- as a business model -- health care is winning. It is taking everyone’s money with an amazingly low level of accountability for the product it sells.
We need to face the simple reality that -- Health care will never reform itself.
Very few business models exist in any industry that reward the sellers for selling less.
Health care in America has over one million independent business units that live on the flow of fees generated by selling care by the piece – not by the package. Reducing the number of pieces sold reduces their earning by the million business units.
The Business Model of American health care currently generates over $2.1 trillion in total revenue
Health care is • full of smart people
Smart people do not kill the geese who lay lots of golden eggs. • Health care is awash in both golden eggs and very smart people.
We need to simply recognize the reality that the people who depend on a cash flow of fees to stay in business and serve patients will not, voluntarily, take independent steps to reduce the flow of those fees
Fact One • Health Care costs are not evenly distributed across the entire population: • 1% = 35% of costs
Cost Distribution of Care Cost Population 35% 1% $300 per month average cost Break even cost insuring one percent: $12,000 per month
50% = 3% of costs • 20% = 0% of costs • ½% = 25% of costs • ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ • Costs are not evenly distributed
U.S. Population U.S. Care Costs 80% 10%
Fact Two • -- Some diseases cost a lot more than others • -- Acute care costs are not the key cost driver for American health care
Total Cost of Care In America • Chronic Care • 75% • Acute • Care • 25% Chronic Care vs. Acute Care
Chronic care costs • can be impacted • (Rand data -- only 30% to 50% of patients receive right care now)
Diabetes is the fastest growing disease in America -- • -- The number one cause of Kidney failure, blindness and amputations • -- The number one co-morbidity causing death from heart disease • -- Diabetics spend 32% of Medicare expenses
Rand Data • -- Barely 50% of American diabetics receive appropriate care -- measured by individual care protocols • -- Barely 10% of America’s diabetics receive the full package of needed care
Cost Drivers – Normal Inflation Normal inflation 2008 2010 2020 • Cost Mitigators • (Inflation)
Basic Inflation -- heat, light, salaries, benefits • Additional Pressure -- health care worker shortages (lab techs, nurses, etc.)
Basic Inflation • We start with a higher base and then add both normal costs of inflation (and inflation results from worker shortages)
Cost Drivers -- New technology, treatments, drugs, genetics, science New technology, treatments, drugs, genetics, science Normal inflation 2008 2010 2020 • Cost Mitigators • (Technology)
Number of MRI Machines Per Million People Source: OECD
Total Transplants Source: OECD, BMJ
-- New drugs and new technologies do not go through a value screen of any kind in the U.S. • -- Manufacturers’ profitability and provider profitability are the twin driving technology business models -- not value
We have new treatments and approaches for individual patients that now exceed $1 million per patient, per year, year after year
No other country provides those levels of expensive, extended treatment
Great Britain’s NICE • £30,000 • per year of life
Only the U.S. payment system uses and pays for whatever works. Only untested and unproven care is not covered
Cost Drivers -- Inefficient, uncoordinated, unlinked care Inefficient, uncoordinated, unlinked care New technology, new treatments, new drugs, genetics, new science Normal inflation 2008 2010 2020 • Cost Mitigators • (Inefficiency)
-- Co-morbidities drive most costs • -- Care linkage deficiencies abound • (Care coordination is sporadic and unfunded) • -- 10,000 fees for units of care • -- No reward for outcomes or results
We need to make care linkages a core competency of American health care
Cost Drivers -- Perversely incented caregivers/ zero performance data Perversely incented caregivers/zero performance data Inefficient, uncoordinated, unlinked care New technology, new treatments, new drugs, genetics, new science Normal inflation 2008 2010 2020 • Cost Mitigators • (Perverse Incentives)
In today’s world, more efficient and effective caregivers simply deprive themselves of income
Asthma Crisis Revenue Reality: • $200 to be proactive • $10,000 to treat • $0 to prevent
Many Treat • Few Prevent
Cost Drivers – Aging Population Perversely incented caregivers/zero performance data Aging population Inefficient, uncoordinated, unlinked care New technology, new treatments, new drugs, genetics, new science Normal inflation 2008 2010 2020 • Cost Mitigators • (Aging)