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Are We Heading For a Train Wreck?: The US Health Care System in 2007

Are We Heading For a Train Wreck?: The US Health Care System in 2007. Richard Lichtenstein Ph.D, MPH Department of Health Management and Policy School of Public Health University of Michigan.

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Are We Heading For a Train Wreck?: The US Health Care System in 2007

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  1. Are We Heading For a Train Wreck?:The US Health Care System in 2007 Richard Lichtenstein Ph.D, MPH Department of Health Management and Policy School of Public Health University of Michigan

  2. “The problem of providing satisfactory medical care to all the people of the United States at costs which they can meet is a pressing one. At the present time, many persons do not receive service which is adequate either in quantity or quality, and the costs of service are inequitably distributed.

  3. The result is a tremendous amount of preventable physical pain and mental waste. Furthermore, these conditions are…largely unnecessary. The United States has the economic resources, the organizing ability and the technical experience to solve this problem.”

  4. Source: Committee on the Costs of Medical Care. Medical Care for the American People: The Final Report of the Committee on the Costs of Medical Care. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. October 31, 1932

  5. The nation’s health care system is a “tangled, highly fragmented web that often wastes resources by providing unnecessary services and duplicating efforts, leaving unaccountable gaps in care and failing to build on the strength of all health professionals.” The Institute of Medicine, Crossing the Quality Chasm. 2001

  6. World Health Organization (WHO) Definition of Health “Health is a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.”

  7. The Traditional Health Care System in the US Has Had Several “Fatal” Flaws • System of Financing Care (Fee-for-service system; fragmented payments) • Organization of Services “A Paradox of Excess and Deprivation”* • Insurance Coverage of the Population Health coverage is not a right in America *Enthoven and Kronick, NEJM 320:29-37. 1989

  8. PROBLEMS WE FACE AS A RESULT: • COSTS • ACCESS TO COVERAGE AND CARE • QUALITY AND ACCOUNTABILITY • RACIAL AND ECONOMIC DISPARITIES in HEALTH AND CARE

  9. Health Care Costs: Magnitude of Growth Both total and per capita spending on health have skyrocketed. $1.988 Trillion $6,697 $172 $35 Billion Source: Health, United States, 2001, Table 114; Health Affairs, National Health Spending in 2005, Jan-Feb. 2007.

  10. !/28/07

  11. General Motors Health Care Costs • $5.4 billion in health spending in ’05 • $1.4 billion in 2002 for prescription drugs (31% of healthcare costs) • $1,500 per vehicle • 3.1 retirees/active worker, compared to Toyota with .02 retirees/active worker Source: Detroit News February 10, 2005 and March 11, 2004 and NYTimes.com May 19, 2006

  12. General Motors Health Care Costs • In October, 2005, GM and the UAW negotiated to increase costs of care to retirees. Active workers now contribute $1/hour for retiree health care. • Unfunded liability of $85 billion (in 2006 dollars) for future health care costs for workers and retirees. Source: Detroit News February 10, 2005 and March 11, 2004 and NYTimes.com May 19, 2006

  13. Health Care Costs: Impact on the Public Sector Health care is consuming an increasing percentage of public budgets. Michigan spent 25% of its budget on health in 2003 New York State spent over 45% of its budget on Medicaid in 2004-2005. Source: Health, United States, 2006, Table 120

  14. Medicare Expenditures and Non-Interest Income by Sourceas a Percent of GDP -2007 Source: Status of the Social Security and Medicare Programs. A SUMMARY OF THE 2007 ANNUAL REPORTS http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/TRSUM/trsummary.html), 2007

  15. Spending on Medicare Drug Benefit • Between 2006-2015 expenditures for the Medicare Drug Benefit estimated $724 bill. • One-time increased expenditures 2005-2006 of 27.8% due to addition of benefit • Projected growth in Medicare expenditures on drugs of 7.3% annually between 2006-2014 Source: Kaiser Family Foundation Fact Sheet, April 2005 using data from CMS/Office of the Actuary

  16. ACCESS TO CARE: The Uninsured Americans without health insurance increased by 1.4 million in 2003. *2005: 44.8 million Americans were uninsured Source: US Census Bureau, Historical Health Insurance Tables, http://www.census.gov/ (accessed May, 14, 2007) In 2007, the US Census Bureau revised downwards the figures for 2004-05 (methodological issue) . 2003 data not revised. The wording of CPS questions implies that these estimates represent the number uninsured for the entire calendar year. However, comparisons with other data sources (such as MEPS and SIPP) suggest that the CPS figures are much closer to point-in-time than full-year estimates. Some of the dip observed in 1999 and later years reflects the addition of a verification question that reduced the number uninsured for calendars years 1999 and later.

  17. Americans Received Recommended health care only 54.9% of the time! Quality is Uneven McGlynn, EA, Asch, SM, Adams,J, et al. (2003) ”The Quality of health care delivered to adults in the United States.” NEJM 348:2635-45

  18. How good is American health care? Based on an extensive literature review performed at RAND in 1998: • Only 50% of Americans receive recommended preventive care • Patients with acute illness: 70% received recommended treatments 30% received contraindicated treatments • Patients with chronic illness: 60% received recommended treatments 20% received contraindicated treatments Schuster MA, McGlynn EA, Brook RH. How good is the quality of healthcare in the United States? Milbank Quarterly 1998; 76(4):517-63 (Dec).

  19. Hospital Safety and Medical ErrorsLeapfrog Group Hospital Safety Measures • Evidence-Based Hospital Referral (EHR) • Computer Physician Order Entry (CPOE) • ICU Physician Staffing (IPS) “Intensivists” Leapfrog has added over 20 other safety measures since beginning with these

  20. Racial and Economic Disparities

  21. Infant Mortality Rates by Race*United States, 1970-2003 Deaths per 1,000 Live Births Source: Health, United States, 2006, Table 22 *Race of mother

  22. Years of Potential Life Lostdue to Diabetes Mellitus, by race and Hispanic Origin, 2003 * Age-adjusted years lost before age 75 per 100,000 population under 75 years of age. Source: Health, United States, 2006, Table 30

  23. What would be the characteristics of a well-designed system?(At least, this was what we thought for several years!)

  24. IOM Aims for the 21st Century Health Care System • Safe • Effective • Patient-centered • Timely • Efficient • Equitable Source: IOM, Crossing the Quality Chasm, 2001, p. 5-6

  25. 1. Coverage • We need universal coverage to make the system work. • “There will be no universal coverage unless it is mandated by the Government.” (Lichtenstein) • “You can’t have universal coverage without a police state” (Newt Gingrich)

  26. 2. Financing • Link the population to providers and hold the providers accountable for costs and quality. • Rely primarily on prepaid, capitated payments. • Single payment integrates physician and “facilities.”

  27. 3. Services • Match level and type of services to needs of the population- Epidemiologically-based planning. • Focus on primary care and prevention. • Create a hierarchy of services. • Concentrate high cost/low incidence procedures in regional centers.

  28. 4. Cost Containment • Reduce unnecessary care --hospital days, procedures, lab tests, etc. • Less duplication of costly technology. • More reliance on primary care providers; less on sub-specialists. • Cost-effective prevention. • Lower administrative costs.

  29. 5. Quality and Accountability

  30. Systems should be held Accountable for Quality and Cost, They should: • Promote clinical effectiveness research. • Only use effective procedures, therapies, tests, etc. (Evidence-Based Medicine) • Use clinical “guidelines,” “clinical pathways,” etc. • Reduce errors • Increase Patient Centeredness • Follow ideals of TQM, CQI, Six Sigma, LEAN

  31. Reporting Systems such as HEDIS Can Be Used to Evaluate Hospitals and Health Plans • Patient Satisfaction • Quality of Care • Costs • Access • Population Health Status

  32. From the late 1980s through the early 1990s, a “Revolution” in the Organization of the Delivery System Occurred --But it happened through market mechanisms, not government intervention (i.e. The Clinton Health Plan)

  33. There Was a Shift in the Health Care Paradigm Physicians Solo Practice Hospitals Free-standing, community Insurance Indemnity Purchasers Passive Group Practice or Employed Networks & Integrated Delivery Systems Managed Care “Prudent Purchaser” as Proactive Partner Source: J. Billi, MD, U of M

  34. Traditional: Self-employed Solo practice Single specialty groups Fee-for-service reimbursement for care of individual patients No “gate keeping” Autonomy Managed Care Era: Employed Group practice Multi-specialty groups Capitated for care ofa population Primary care physician gatekeeper Accountability Change in Physician Roles Source: J. Billi, M.D., U of M

  35. The Paradigm Shift was Closely Associated with the Movement to Managed Care and Integrated Delivery Systems *BUT,* Since the late 1990s, the paradigm has shifted again!--Away from tightly managed care and toward a modified fee-for-service system.

  36. ACCESS TO CARE: Enrollment in Various Types of Employment-Based Health Insurance . (1) Source: American Hospitals Association, TrendWatch ChartBook, 2006 (http://www.aha.org/aha/research-and-trends/health-and-hospital-trends/2006.html, accessed May 28, 2007)

  37. The Decline of the HospitalThe Hospital is no Longer the “Center of the Health Care Universe.”It is Now Becoming One of the Pieces of an Integrated Delivery System.

  38. Since 1981, there has been an incredible decrease in the use of inpatient care • Decline of 80 million patient days per year • Financial Incentives (e.g. managed care) • New Technology (e.g. Laparoscopy, new Rxs) • Early Ambulation • More hospital-based surgery is performed on an outpatient basis than inpatient

  39. Major Trends in the Hospital Sector during the late 80’s and 90’s: Mergers Acquisitions Downsizing Re-engineering Integration System Formation Managed Care

  40. Many of these trends have stopped or even reversed! System “divorces” (Stanford and UCSF) Virtual Integration Physician Practice Management Groups have collapsed

  41. Trends in Private Sector Health Care Financing • Shift of cost of care to employees • Higher share of premiums • Premiums for dependents • Higher Co-pays and Deductibles (e.g. for hospital) • Consumer–Directed Health Plans • Health Savings Accounts, • Defined Contribution Plans • Avoidance of Employee Coverage (Walmart) • Contractors • Part-time employees

  42. OTHER MAJOR ISSUES • The Future of Medicare • Unsustainable Growth in Costs • Medicaid, SCHIP and the Uninsured • Will we ever cover the whole population? • Physician Workforce Issues • Will we have a physician surplus or a shortage? • Nursing Shortage • How can we train more American Nurses? • **How will we afford the costs of new technology?**

  43. The solutions to these problems are complex:Beware of anyone who says they know a simple solution to our health care dilemma!

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