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Health Care in the U.S. and the World

Health Care in the U.S. and the World. Martin Donohoe. Determinants of Health. Era Socioeconomic status Sex Race Location Environment Genetics Health Habits Access to Care. The State of U.S. Health Care. 52 million uninsured 45,000 deaths/year 30 million more underinsured

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Health Care in the U.S. and the World

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  1. Health Care in the U.S. and the World Martin Donohoe

  2. Determinants of Health Era Socioeconomic status Sex Race Location Environment Genetics Health Habits Access to Care

  3. The State of U.S. Health Care • 52 million uninsured • 45,000 deaths/year • 30 million more underinsured • Remain in dead-end jobs • Go without needed care and/or prescriptions • Marry

  4. Reasons for No Health Insurance Coverage (2009)

  5. The State of U.S. Health Care US ranks near the bottom among westernized nations in overall population health (#24), life expectancy (#42), infant and maternal mortality, etc. 15% of Americans live in poverty 22% of US children live in poverty

  6. Health Care Expenditures per Capita • U.S. = $7,960 • Canada, Australia, Japan, Europe: $3,000 to $6,000 • Average for low income developing nations = $22-25

  7. Who Pays for Health Care? • Government (federal, state, and local) • Medicare, Medicaid, VA, IHS, jails and prisons • Private insurance • Primarily employer-based • Out-of-pocket • Health care costs = 17.6% of GDP (1/2 of worldwide health care costs)

  8. Health Insurance Industry • Delisting • Cherry picking • Pre-existing conditions

  9. Health Insurance Industry • High administrative costs • 15-30% (vs. 2-3% for Medicare and Medicaid) • Average full-time physician spends over $85,000/yr on billing and insurance functions • 17,849 different billing codes (in 2012 increases to 141,058)

  10. Health Insurance Industry • Amount actually spent on patient care referred to as “medical loss ratio” • Large profit margins • Median pay of health care CEOs = $10.6 million (2010) • Loyalty: shareholders (not patients) • Corruption

  11. Distribution of National Health Expenditures

  12. Some Reasons for Rising Health Care Costs • Aging population • Chronic diseases • Technological advances • Exploding drug costs • Increasing specialist referrals

  13. Some Reasons for Rising Health Care Costs Procedural variability Overuse of diagnostic tests, medications, and therapeutic procedures Administrative costs

  14. Drug Companies’ Cost Structure

  15. Innovation:Published Research Leading to Drugs

  16. Premature Deaths in the U.S. 10% due to inadequate medical care 60% due to behaviors, social circumstances, and environmental exposures

  17. Address Social Factors Responsible for Illness and Death • Deaths in 2000 attributable to: • Low education: 245,000 • Racial segregation: 176,000 • Low social support: 162,000 • Individual-level poverty: 133,000 • AJPH 2011;101:1456-1465

  18. Address Social Factors Responsible for Illness and Death • Deaths in 2000 attributable to: • Income inequality: 119,000 (population-attributable mortality – 5.1%) • Area-level poverty: 39,000 (population-attributable mortality – 1.7%) • AJPH 2011;101:1456-1465

  19. Address Social Factors Responsible for Illness and Death • Deaths in 2000 attributable to: • AMI – 193,000 • CVD – 168,000 • Lung CA – 156,000 • AJPH 2011;101:1456-1465

  20. Major Contributors to Illness and Death 40% of US mortality due to tobacco, poor diet, physical inactivity, and misuse of alcohol Every $1 invested in programs covering above items saves $5.60 in health care costs

  21. Prevention 2-4% of national health care expenditures Every $1 spent on building biking trails and walking paths would save nearly $3 in medical expenses Every $1 spent on wellness programs, companies would save over $3 in medical costs and almost $3 in absenteeism costs

  22. Public Health Spending Public health spending minimal Mortality rates fall 1-7% for every 10% increase in public health spending

  23. Compliance 33% of prescriptions go unfilled Only 50-65% of patients take medicines as prescribed Noncompliant patients more likely to be hospitalized and to die Noncompliant patients have twice the annual medical care costs of those who are compliant Cost, health literacy contribute to noncompliance

  24. Poverty and Hunger US: 15% of residents and 22% of children live in poverty Rates of poverty in Blacks and Hispanics = 2X Whites Poverty associated with worse physical and mental health

  25. Economic Disparities • Women 75 cents/$1 Men • Median income of black U.S. families as a percent of white U.S. families 62% • 60% in 1968 • 63% for Hispanic families

  26. Educational Apartheid High levels of de facto school segregation by race and SES Gross discrepancies in per-pupil spending and teacher salaries Achievement and graduation gaps growing

  27. Urban/Rural Disparities 25% of the U.S. population lives in rural areas Only 10% of U.S. physicians practice in rural areas

  28. Racial Disparities in Health Care Coverage • Percent uninsured: • Whites = 12% • Asians = 17% • African-Americans = 21% • Hispanics = 32% • Undocumented immigrants = 100% (emergency care exception) • CA Proposition 189

  29. Racial Disparities in Health Care:African-Americans Higher maternal and infant mortality Higher death rates for most diseases Shorter life expectancies Less health insurance Undergo fewer diagnostic tests / therapeutic procedures

  30. Health Disparities Among Latinos • Higher rates of: • Overweight and obesity • Certain cancers • Stroke • Diabetes • Asthma/COPD • Chronic liver disease/cirrhosis • HIV/AIDS • Homicide

  31. Racial Disparities in Health Care:African-Americans • Equalizing the mortality rates of whites and African-Americans would have averted 686,202 deaths between 1991 and 2000 • Whereas medical advances averted 176,633 deaths • AJPH 2004;94:2078-2081

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