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Concern continues to be expressed about the rapid rise of
health care costs in the
United States, its present
impact, implications for the future, and alternative policies aimed at
moderating the increase. For example, a 1990 survey of 821 chief executive
officers of businesses in Wisconsin revealed that 67 percent perceived health
costs as "substantially out of control" with 96 percent responding that these
costs are either substantially or somewhat out of control. A subset of these
figures for Central Wisconsin CEOs illustrate a similar response. (William M.
Mercer Meidinger Hansen, Inc., 1990).
COST
INCREASES
The extent of medical cost increases can be
illustrated in several ways. First, medical cost increases regularly exceed more
general price increases in the
U.S. as illustrated in Figure 1
(see appendix). In 1988, for example, all items excluding medical care had an
increase of 3.9 percent while medical care services, including hospital care,
had a 6.5 percent increase. Prescription and non‑prescription drugs and medical
supplies had an even larger increase of 6.9 percent. Table 1 shows that all
medical increases exceeded other key CPI items.
TABLE 1
Comparative Costs Increases
1986‑88
Item
1986 1987 1988
Consumer Price
Index 1.9
3.7 4.1
All Items except
Med. 1.6
3.4 3.9
Housing
5.5 4.7 4.8
Energy
‑13.2
0.4 0.8
Medical
Care‑Total 7.5
6.6 6.5
Physician
Services 6.4
6.6 6.7
Hospitals
6.0 6.9 9.3
Prescription
Drugs 8.6
8.0 7.9
Source: Health Care
Financing Review, Fall, 1989.
Another perspective on cost escalation is the percent of the
GNP that medical care represents. Currently, health care takes about 12 percent
of GNP, representing a steady increase and double the GNP percent (6%) for
healthcare prior to the adoption of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965. In comparison
to other nations, U.S.
health care takes a significantly larger percent of GNP. Using 1987 data, Table
2 shows comparative heath care percents of GNP of OECD nations, illustrating
both the differences between the U.S. and other nations as well as the
increasing divergence over the years.
Despite this disparity, morbidity and mortality are not lower
in the U.S.
than in many Western industrialized nations which spend less. In a Center for
Disease Control study of death rates from all causes in 33 nations from 1984 to
1987, the U.S. ranked near the middle of the group. The
U.S.
rate was 828.4 deaths per 100,000 people while
Japan,
the best of the 33, had a 628.8 rate. Similarly, life expectancy in the U.S. of
75 years is 17th among the 33 nations, trailing the leader Japan with 79.9
years. Canada and Great Britain, countries used frequently in comparison to the
U.S.,
had life expectancies of 76.5 and 75.3, respectively.
TABLE
2
Health Care as a Percent of GNP
Nation 1960 1965 1970 1975
1980 1985 1987
Canada
5.5 6.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 8.4
8.6
Denmark
3.6 4.8 6.1 6.5 6.8 6.2
6.0
France
4.2 5.2 5.8 6.8 7.6 8.6
8.6
West Germany
4.7 5.1 5.5 7.8 7.9 8.2
8.2
Italy
3.3 4.0 4.8 5.8 6.8 6.7
6.9
Japan
2.9 4.3 4.4 5.5 6.4 6.6
6.8
Sweden
4.7 5.6 7.2 8.0 9.5 9.4
9.0
Great Britain
3.9 4.1 4.5 5.5 5.8 6.0
6.1
United States
5.2 6.0 7.4 8.4 9.2 10.9
11.2
OECD Average 3.8
4.5 5.3 6.5 7.0 7.4 7.5
Source: Schieber and Poullier
(1989)
Another view of health care costs relates to the percent of
the government budget devoted to health care. Currently government pays about 40
percent of all personal health care, including over half of all hospital and
nursing home care. The percent of Federal and state budgets devoted to health
care, excluding research dollars, has continued to escalate. In the last 15
years, Medicare, the largest government program, has increased spending for
physician services by 15 to 26 percent per year. Hospital expenditures saw a
similar increase, but have moderated after 1983 with the adoption of the cost
control program, Prospective Payment System, providing a fixed sum to hospitals
based upon the patient's diagnosis (Diagnosis Related Groups‑DRGs).
THE PROBLEMS OF COST INCREASES
Obviously, health is very important. Often it is said
that without health there is nothing. Nonetheless, the cost increases have
significant impacts that need to be examined, especially given that expenditure
increases do not correlate highly with improvements in health. The
U.S., with the greatest
spending per capita, does not have better health than many other developed
nations. Increases in recent years have not significantly reduced infant
mortality or increased the availability of medical care in our inner cities and
rural areas.
Increases in health care as a percent of GNP and of
government budgets represent a redistribution of resources to the health sector.
Other important societal goals that may be neglected include the following:
private sector investment in plant and equipment to increase productivity;
public sector social programs, including poverty services, and drug addiction
prevention; and industrial safety. These activities may have as important an
impact on the health of a population as additional expenditures for health care.
The question that arises is what is the appropriate level of expenditures for
health care when taking into account the marginal gains from increased health
spending versus similar benefits from spending in other needed areas.
Increased cost, with its concomitant increased health
insurance premiums, has added significantly to personnel cost and ultimately to
the cost of products. Joseph Califano, former Health, Education, Welfare
secretary, on the board of Chrysler Motors, has detailed the impact of those
cost increases in his book. One result is that
U.S. products become less
competitive with those of other nations. Another consequence is that the percent
of employers offering health insurance as a benefit has been decreasing,
resulting in the growth of the employed uninsured who do not qualify for
Medicaid. Even where health insurance is provided, firms are reducing benefits,
restricting access to health care of their employees, and passing a larger share
of both insurance and direct health care cost to the employees. The consequence
is that the number of uninsured has increased to 13.5 percent of the U.S.
population, or 31.5 million people. Further, after decades of service expansion
more limitations are being imposed on those covered by insurance resulting in a
decline in health services available to this portion of the population. Lastly,
some hospitals are shouldering a larger amount of uncompensated care, although
some hospitals refuse admission to patients without insurance.
The elderly, the group with the largest health care expenses,
have been hardest hit. Medicare's adoption in 1965 provided significant medical
coverage to the elderly. But recent increases in their out‑of‑pocket expenses
associated with Medicare premium increases, deductibles, and balanced billing by
physicians not accepting Medicare assignment has been significant. The Federal
catastrophic program to assist the elderly was repealed before implementation
because of opposition to its method of financing ‑a tax surcharge on middle and
upper class elderly. Cost of prescriptions and long term care hit older
Americans particular hard. Cost and controversies over method of financing make
a workable solution difficult to adopt as shown by the negative reactions to the
report of the Pepper Commission, chaired by Jay Rockefeller. Federal deficits,
administration opposition to tax increases, and recent state tax increases (Wisconsin
being an exception) constrain action.
ASSESSMENT OF HEALTH COST INCREASES
The escalation of health costs can be attributed to
multiple causes. First and most significantly is technological change. New
technologies in medicine have added tests and procedures, frequently not
resulting in cost savings. Equipment such as Magnetic Resonance Imaging used for
diagnosis or lithotripsy used for non‑surgical treatment of kidney stones (other
applications currently in limited use) and beneficial procedures such as bone
marrow or kidney transplants are very expensive. Not only is the equipment
costly, but studies have revealed overuse of new technologies; and in diagnostic
areas, the frequent dual use of the old and new tests. Hospitals typically do
not compete in terms of price but by acquiring the latest technologies.
Consequently, we have duplication of underutilized equipment.
Several recent studies have concluded that a
significant number of tests ordered in hospitals were either inappropriate,
redundant with other tests, or unnecessary in adding information to make a
diagnosis or to improving treatment. Repeated studies have shown wide variation
in the testing and surgical procedures in different regions of the nation, even
in neighboring states. Aggressive testing and treatment is particularly
questionable for those where there is not a reasonable prospect of extending
quality life. This area evokes a host of ethical questions relating to how much
care do we give in these instances and the conditions under which withholding
care makes more sense ethically as well as for resource allocation.
We are concerned for both cost and efficiency reasons that
what is done is beneficial. Procedures have been used whose effectiveness has
been questioned. Currently, outcomes research to determine treatment
efficaciousness is a high priority on the research agenda.
The Hill‑Burton Program, enacted after WWII to build
and modernize hospitals, was a laudable policy, making significant improvements
in medicine's physical plant. Nonetheless, we overbuilt and many hospitals
currently have lower than optimal occupancy rates. With the necessity to cover
fixed costs, the expense of a hospital stay increased. Smaller hospitals that
have been unable to spread their costs over many patients have closed.
The incentives in the medical system have not been oriented
to cost savings. Individuals are charged a fee for each service, hence an
incentive to increase services. Although the literature has reported mixed
results, a recent study shows that financial incentives do impact physicians
decisions (Hemeneway, et.al, 1990). This incentive could be tempered if the
consumer had an opposite incentive to minimize services and costs. But this is
not the situation. Lacking the medical knowledge to make an independent choice,
consumers rely on the physician provider to determine service acquisition. Cost
enters the determination less than other services because of the dominance of
third party payers (insurance companies or the government) in making payment.
Further, in the case of health, the consumer wants the best, a decision that may
be tempered by cost in other purchases. Only recently has there been an emphasis
on cost‑effectiveness decision making in the medical literature.
Rising malpractice insurance premiums have impacted the costs
involved in some specialties. Although the cost of malpractice insurance affects
all physicians and hospitals, specialties with the greatest suit risk have seen
the greatest increase, such as obstetrics, and had the most significant impact
on the cost passed on to the patient. Defensive medicine, an outgrowth of
enhanced concern over malpractice suits, where tests are run less for diagnosis
and more for the record, contributes to cost increases.
ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES TO COST CONTAINMENT
The era of physicians making decisions unencumbered by
external concerns is concluding. The consumer, his insurance company, his
employer, and the government are all concerned about cost. Thus cost constraints
are being introduced. We can examine these constraints in two categories‑‑a
market competitive model and the government regulation model‑‑recognizing that
the two approaches are not mutually exclusive.
Market reforms attempt to restrain the traditional
forces of supply and demand to restraint the price (See Greenberg, 1988).
Suppliers need to be competitive, resulting in a restraint in price, while
consumers must include cost considerations in health care decisions. For
patients, it is often their agent, whether private insurance company or
government, who introduces cost considerations.
There are many types of market reforms. The use of
Health Maintenance Organizations was considered to be a leading market oriented
reform based on the notion that HMOs would compete for patients, charge a yearly
fee, and change the providers incentives from maximizing of services under
fee‑for‑service to cost containment. HMOs do save money, especially on reduced
hospitalizations, but some are criticized as providing insufficient care.
Preferred Provider Plans are fee‑for‑service based, and often give a discount to
organization selecting them.
Incentives and cost controls can be introduced in other ways.
To reduce use of services and make patients themselves more cost conscious,
increased deductibles and co‑payments are being introduced. Whether patients
significantly over utilized services and these enhanced cost sensitivities will
have an important impact in moving to an appropriate level of care is doubtful
(Pfaff, 1990, p.21). Nonetheless, deductibles and co‑payments reduce the cost of
insurance to employers and make insurance plans to insurance companies more
profitable. Further, insurance companies are requiring their insurers to obtain
a second opinion for many surgeries and pre‑admission approval to enter a
hospital with the intention to reduce unnecessary procedures and
hospitalization. It may be suggested that the rate of divergence of surgical
opinions and denial of hospital admissions, which has been small, is inadequate
in assessing their impact for these administrative procedures may result in
physicians making less costly recommendations in the first place. Currently,
utilization management, focusing primarily on hospitalization, has its cost
savings offset by higher outpatient costs and greater administrative
expenditures incurred. A report by the
Institute of Medicine, though,
believes these programs will have greater future effectiveness as medical
outcomes studies produce practice guidelines.
The most notable market‑oriented reform was instituted
by the National Government regarding Medicare hospitalizations. Beginning in
1983 Medicare pays a flat fee to hospitals for treatment of Medicare eligible
patients based upon the illness for which they were admitted. The fee is tied to
the average cost of treating each illness, classified into Diagnostic Related
Groups. Prospective Payment Plan, as this reform is known, is intended to change
the hospitals incentives to cost containment. Results to date show a dramatic
impact as the average number of days in a hospital fell significantly, the
number of outpatients procedures rose greatly and the hospital occupancy rate
declined. Charges that patients have been released from the hospital earlier
than medically appropriate have been made by patients and some physicians.
Reimbursement rates, especially urban‑rural differentials, have been attacked by
hospitals. They charge that the closing of some smaller hospitals, which
typically have a larger Medicare mix, may be partially attributed to the rates.
The urban‑rural payment
difference, however, has been narrowed in recent budgets and cost data for
Medicare clearly show that the PPS reform has had a moderating effect.
Another approach to cost containment is through government
regulation. Many states, including
Wisconsin, have used hospital
rate setting, an effective device, to restrain cost increases. When the
Wisconsin legislature allowed the rate setting law to expire, the immediate
result was steep increases (Goddeeris,et al., 1988, p. 227). Some expected these
but thought that much smaller increases would follow in subsequently years. But
this hasn't been the case. Between January 15, 1989, and
April 9, 1990, the state's hospitals increased rates 8.5 percent.
Hospitals counter that not only have they faced inflation, but Medicare's rates
have only increased a small amount, necessitating them to shift costs to other
patients.
Another regulatory device that has been used is known
as Certificate of Need. Based on the idea that acquisition of technology is a
major cost, analyst say that we need to in essence ration the allocation of
costly equipment to ensure that we avoid duplication, resulting in the equipment
being underutilized and hence more costly to each patient. Studies have
demonstrated that hospitals compete less on the basis of cost and more on the
technology available, resulting in expense to society. Certificate of Need,
although working in other nations, has never significantly restrained costs in
the U.S.
because, it appears, allocations made by planning boards were easy to obtain.
The Reagan administration dropped the requirement that states have Certificate
of Need reviews, and Wisconsin repealed its CON requirement.
A new regulatory device is now being launched.
Concerned that while Part A of medicate, which pays hospitals, was being
restrained, Part B, paying physicians, was seeing massive increases, the
Congress adopted the Resource Based Relative Value Scale (RBRVS), which will set
the rate that physicians are paid by Medicare for each service. The purpose is
also to realign prices since it is argued that some charges, such as for
surgical services, are higher than they should be relative to other procedures,
while others, especially those not involving interventionist procedures‑‑known
as contemplative services‑‑receive less than they deserve. An example of the
latter would be office visits. Physicians will be limited in the amount they can
charge patients beyond the allowable sum. Additionally, a total yearly target
expenditure is to be used to restrain physicians from increasing the number of
services by making future increases dependent upon meeting the targets, an
approach vigorously opposed by the American Medical Association. Although it is
anticipated that the RBRVS will be cost neutral in its first year, the
regulatory approach's designers are hopeful of future restraints on cost.
All of these reforms have introduced managed care,
appropriate care mindful of cost consideration. The
U.S. also has a multiple
payment system with government, insurance companies, and individuals being
charged. Both managed care and the multiplicity of payment sources result in
administrative costs well beyond other nations. See Figure 2 in the appendix for
a comparison between the
U.S.
and Canada.
In conclusion, the health care system in the
U.S. faces major cost problems
impacting the rest of the economy. Cost containment efforts to date, while
having some restraint on cost increases, have not reined in the escalation which
has been well beyond increases in our GNP. Although pundits frequently argue
that only the painful prescription of health care rationing will have a notable
effect, this conclusion may be short‑sighted. A significant change in our
patchwork health care financing system is needed. A change based upon private
insurance will tie premiums to the health status of individuals or groups. But a
public insurance or tax based system could be a progressive, income elastic one
(Pfaff, 1990, p. 21). Adoption of either approach requires a comprehensive
health policy, currently lacking in the U.S.
WORKS CITED
Goddeeris, John, et al. 1988.
"Hospital Rate Setting: National Evidence and Issues for Wisconsin." Pp. 208‑228
in S. Danziger and J. Witte, eds., State Policy Choices: The
Wisconsin Experience.
Madison:
University of Wisconsin Press.
Greenberg, Warren, ed. 1988 "Special Issue on Competition in the Health Care
Sector: Ten Years Later." Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law. 13
(Summer, 1988).
Evans, Robert G. 1990. "Tension, Compression, and Shear: Directions, Stresses,
and Outcomes of Health Care Cost Control." Journal of Health Politics, Policy
and Law. 15:101‑128.
Health Care Financing Review.
1989. 11 (Fall).
Pfaff, Martin. 1990. "Differences in Health Care Spending Across Counties:
Statistical Evidence." Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law. 15‑1‑67.
William M. Mercer Meidinger
Hansen, Inc., 1990. "Health Care Survey."
Schieber, G. J. and J.‑P.
Poullier. 1989. "Trends in International Health Care Expenditure Trends: 1987.
Health Affairs." 318:169‑177. |