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Coping with Rising Health Costs

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Technology is the greatest factor driving health care growth ... by the public sector Denmark, Ireland, New Zealand, Canada ... New Directions for Reform ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Coping with Rising Health Costs


1
Coping with Rising Health Costs
  • The Organization for Economic Cooperation and
    Development

2
Health Spending Trends
  • The OECD countries face rising health
    costs 1970 5.4 GDP 2000 8.4 GDP
  • United States 1970 6.9 GDP 2000 13.0
    GDP

3
Health Spending Trends
  • Germany 1970 6.3 GDP 2000 10.6 GDP
  • Switzerland 1970 5.6 GDP 2000 10.7
    GDP

4
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5
Health Spending Growth
  • Per capita health spending is linked to per
    capita growth in GDP
  • Income affects both volume and price of services
  • Variation across countries reflects policy
    decisions regarding appropriate spending levels
    and value of additional spending on health
    relative to other goods and services

6
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7
Medical Technology
  • Technology is the greatest factor driving health
    care growth
  • Recent developments in imaging, biotechnology and
    pharmacology

8
Population Aging
  • Health care costs increase sharply with age
    beginning at age 45. Total health care spending
    is estimated to increase by an average of 2 of
    GDP over the period 2000-2050 as a result of
    population ageing

9
Public Sector Spending
  • In most OECD countries there is publicly financed
    health insurance or direct financing of care
  • The public sector accounts for the greatest part
    of health spending in all countries except Korea,
    Mexico and the U.S.

10
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11
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12
Approaches to Health Cost-Containment
  • Regulation of prices, input resources and health
    care service volumes
  • Caps on health spending, either overall or by
    sector
  • Shifts of costs onto the private sector

13
Administered Pricing and Controls
  • Wage controls are prevalent in countries where
    health care workers are public employees - Nordic
    countries, Greece, Italy and Portugal
  • Prices for medical services, supplies and
    institutional care are set administratively
    U.S. Medicare program

14
Administered Pricing and Controls
  • Most countries influence service volumes (e.g.,
    controls over medical school admissions) and
    control hospital sector capacity

15
Limitations
  • Providers may increase volume or change the mix
    of services offered
  • Care may be shifted from one sector to another to
    avoid price controls( e.g., inpatient to
    outpatient care)
  • Diagnoses may be up-coded (e.g., DRGs)
  • Wage/price controls may limit ability to attract
    qualified personnel

16
Budget Caps
  • Initially used to control hospital expenditures
  • Extended to other providers, supplies and
    equipment

17
Limitations
  • Budget caps are most successful in countries
    where health care delivery is provided by the
    public sector Denmark, Ireland, New Zealand,
    Canada
  • Budget caps do not provide incentives for
    providers to improve efficiency or increase
    productivity
  • Budget caps reward inefficient providers and
    penalize efficient ones

18
Cost Shifting to Patients
  • Mainly affects pharmaceuticals
  • The number of drugs not reimbursed has increased
  • Tiered reimbursement for pharmaceuticals is being
    used in more countries

19
Effects of Cost-Control Initiatives
  • Cost containment has had an impact on the share
    of public spending.
  • Between 1990 and 2000 the average share of total
    health spending by the public sector has declined
    from 72.5 to 71.5
  • There has been a decrease in the rate of growth
    in health spending from 6 in 1970s to 3 in 1990s

20
Effects of Cost-Control Initiatives
  • Nonetheless, health spending continues to grow at
    rates exceeding overall economic growth
  • There is a problem in judging the appropriate
    level of health spending

21
New Directions for Reform
  • Large difference in inputs, practice patterns and
    outcomes exist among OECD countries
  • Large differences exist in spending on ambulatory
    and inpatient care, specialist care and
    pharmaceuticals
  • Improved efficiency is a major focus of current
    health reform efforts

22
New Directions for Reform
  • In countries with health systems with integrated
    financing and delivery through the public sector,
    reforms have included - Greater separation
    between health care purchasing and the provision
    of care - Better alignment between payment
    incentives and the objectives for provider
    performance - Decentralized decision
    making - Introducing competition among
    providers

23
New Directions for Reform
  • Reform has focused on modifying payment
    arrangements to better align incentives of health
    care providers
  • There is increased interest in introducing market
    competition among providers

24
Successful Reforms
  • Prospective payment systems for hospitals that
    assign a payment rate based on diagnosis rather
    than length of stay encourage providers to
    minimize costs U.S. Medicare system

25
Mixed Reforms
  • Increased competition among insurers may have
    some positive effect by narrowing premiums,
    encouraging better service and instituting cost
    reduction
  • In the U.S. competition has resulted in market
    segmentation where insurers benefit by enrolling
    low risk patients

26
Mixed Reforms
  • Managed care as practiced in the U.S. has had
    some initial success in containing costs.
    However, currently costs are rising and patients
    and providers are demanding more choice.
  • A number of countries are introducing incentives
    for patients to make economical choices among
    drugs and alternative services

27
Limitations
  • The impact of these policies have been limited by
    tight spending limits
  • Attempts to foster competition among providers in
    single-payer systems have been largely
    unsuccessful and have been reversed in Sweden,
    UK, and New Zealand
  • Failures reflect monopoly positions of providers

28
Looking Ahead
  • There are trade-offs among policy goals e.g.,
    containing costs vs. improving access and health
    system responsiveness
  • Future growth in health care costs in all
    countries is likely reflecting, rising incomes,
    demand for care, technological improvements, and
    aging of the population
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