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The U.S. Health Care System. Craig A. Pedersen, R.Ph., Ph.D. Department of Pharmaceutical and Administrative Sciences School of Pharmacy, Ohio State University And Mary C. Haven, M.S. Objectives.
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TheU.S. Health Care System Craig A. Pedersen, R.Ph., Ph.D. Department of Pharmaceutical and Administrative Sciences School of Pharmacy, Ohio State University And Mary C. Haven, M.S.
Objectives • After viewing and listening to the Internet lectures posted on Blackboard, the student will be able to” • Discuss three reasons for the increase in health care costs in the US in the last two decades. • List at least three reasons for dissatisfaction with the US health care system.
Objectives Cont. • List at least two examples of efforts by the government to increase access to health care. • Give at least three examples of efforts by the government to contain health care costs. • Analyze why these government efforts to contain health care costs were not effective. • Discuss pros and cons of the US health care system.
Historically: Then and Now • The turn of the century • People took care of themselves • Paid for services themselves, or • Charity • Hospitals • Greatest problem 1850-1900 • Epidemics of acute infectious diseases • Today • Primary causes of death
Why we are here! • Medical costs as a % of GNP • 1929, ~ 3.5% GNP • 2001, ~ 14 % GNP • 1 in 8 dollars of our economy is health care • Causes for HC Cost Growth • General Inflation - Merged Hospitals • Demographics - Prescription Drug Costs • Technology - Workforce Shortages Listen 1st Listen 2nd
Demographics: Elderly Population Will More Than Double by 2040 77.2 53.8 34.8 Bureau of the Census: “Projections of the Total Resident Population by 5-Year Age and Sex With Special Age Categories: Middle Series”, Jan. 2000
Medical Costs as % GNP http://cms.hhs.gov/statistics/nhe/historical/t1.asp (Accessed 7/21/2004)
Average % Growth/YearHealth Care Costs http://cms.hhs.gov/statistics/nhe/historical/t1.asp (Accessed 7/21/2004)
Where does the money go? • We spend more than any other country on health care • Estimates of waste in the health care system • 8.6% waste, ineffective work • 11.4% administration • 10% fraud • 15.9% unnecessary services • Administrative costs: NEJM 2003 • U.S. $1,059 or 31% of HC expenditures • Canada $307 or 16.7% of HC expenditures
High Spending, High Dissatisfaction Percentage of population who are satisfied with health-care system (2000) Denmark 91% Germany 58% U.K 57% Canada 46% U.S. 40% Italy 20% Per Capita health-care spending (1999) Share in GDP (1998) U.S. $3,724 Germany $2,365 Denmark $1,940 Canada $1,836 Italy $1,824 U.K. $1,191 U.S. 13.0% Germany 10.6% Denmark Canada 9.3% Italy 7.8% U.K. 7.2% Health Affairs, 20 (2001)
Health Care Reform Efforts by the Federal Government • Kerr Mills Act – 1960 • Medicare and Medicaid - 1965
Federalization and Cost Containment Era • Several Strategies were employed to control rising costs • Voluntary hospital planning • Implementing wage and price freezes • Changing amounts and methods of reimbursement for services • Implementing regulatory programs such as utilization review and controls on hospital capital expenditures • Encouraging development of more cost-effective health care delivery systems • Most were not successful in controlling costs
Major Government Cost Containment ProgramsPRECURSORS TO MANAGED CARE • 1972 Amendments to the Social Security Act • Professional Standards Review Organizations (PSRO) • Dual responsibility for cost containment and quality assurance • National network of Utilization Review programs • Did not work, replaced in 1983 by PRO’s
Major Cost Containment Programs • Section 1122 • mechanism to control capital expenditures of health care organizations • States were required to review proposed capital improvement expenditures • If health care organization continued to construct without approval of the state, then federal government could withhold Medicare payments • Certificate of Need (CON) or Determination of Need (DON) programs by state • Any Capital improvement greater than $150,000 must be approved by the state
Major Cost Containment Programs • 1973, Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) Act • New delivery system that was not costly for the government • 1974, National Health Planning and Resource Development Act (NHPRD) and Health Systems Agencies (HSA) • 1983, Peer Review Organizations (PRO) • 1983, Medicare Prospective Payment System, Diagnosis Related Groups (PPS/DRGs)
Major Cost Containment Programs • 1993, Health Security Act –Not passed • Clinton Health Care Reform • Comprehensive coverage • Employers still required to shoulder the costs • Introduced managed competition • Served to reform the system anyway • 1997, Balanced Budget Act • Saving of $130 billion from Medicare and Medicaid • Cut payments to providers • Outpatient PT and speech pathology capped at $1500/yr • Outpatient OT capped at $1500/yr • Outpatient Prospective Payment System
Dominant Government and Private Health Plans • Medicare / Medicaid (Government) • Dept. of Defense / CHAMPUS (Government) • Veterans Administration (Government) • Federal Employee Plan (Government) • Indian Health Service (Government) • County Hospitals & Health Plans (Government) • Blue Cross Blue Shield plans (Private) • Commercial Insurance plans (Private) • Health Maintenance Organizations (Private) • Self-Insured Employers (Private) • Self-Insured Asso.’s & Union Plans (Private) • Workers Compensation Plans (Both)
Role of the Consumer in the U.S. Health Care System • Not usually responsible for payment • Seller controls both supply & demand • Limited ability to differentiate services • Demographic factors may influence consumption of health care (age, sex, education, income, residence location, and health status) • Convenience and access are high priorities • Desire to have the “best” and “latest” treatment or care