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Trends in National Health Care Expenditures

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Title: Trends in National Health Care Expenditures


1
(No Transcript)
2
Chapter 7
  • Financing Health Care

3
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES
  • Understand the scope and magnitude of U.S. health
    care spending in relationship with other
    developed countries
  • Understand how the U.S. health care payment
    system evolved current trends
  • Understand the related roles of government the
    private sector in financing health care
  • Understand efforts to link costs with quality

4
PART 1
  • National Health Care Expenditures
  • Influences on health care finances
  • Primary components of health care expenditures
  • Private Health Insurance
  • Blue Cross/Blue Shield
  • Commercial Insurers
  • Managed Care

5
Overview
  • Multiple payment sources
  • Working Americans employer health insurance
    (Blue Cross/Blue Shield, managed care plans)
  • Public funds support Medicare (66 ), Medicaid
    for low-income individuals

6
Influences on Health Care Financing
  • Providers, employers (purchasers), consumers,
    politics
  • Tensions- Responsibilities of
  • Government
  • Employers
  • Consumers
  • Providers
  • The Market

7
Health Care Expenditures in Perspective
  • 2008 expenditures 2.33 trillion, 16 of GDP,
    7,681/person 1/6 of total economy
  • Hospital care, physician services, prescription
    drugs 3 top expenses
  • Government sources finance 48 of total
    expenditures

8
FIGURE 7-1 National Health Expenditures per
Capita and Their Share of the Gross Domestic
Product, 19602008.
Source Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, Office of the Actuary, National Health
Statistics Group.
9
FIGURE 7-2 The Nations Health Care Dollar 2008
Where It Went.
Source Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, Office of the Actuary, National Health
Statistics Group.
10
FIGURE 7-3 The Nations Health Care Dollar 2008
Where It Came From
1Other Public includes programs such as workers
compensation, public health activity, Department
of Defense, Department of Veterans Affairs,
Indian Health Service, State and local hospital
subsidies and school health. 2Other Private
includes industrial in-plant, privately funded
construction, and non-patient revenues,
including philanthropy. 3Out of pocket includes
co-pays, deductibles, and treatments no covered
by Private Health Insurance. Note Numbers shown
may not add to 100.0 because of rounding.
Source Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, Office of the Actuary, National Health
Statistics Group.
11
Factors that Decreased Expenditure Growth
  • Managed care utilization controls
  • Hospital prospective payment
  • Managed care physician fee restrictions

12
U.S. Health Spending Compared with Other
Developed Countries (2)
  • 1970-2005 U.S. had largest increase in percent
    of GDP devoted to health care among 29 other
    countries
  • Lower life expectancy based on per capita income
  • Lower ranking on health status indicators
  • Spent gt twice median spending of others per
    capita on health care

13
U.S. Health Spending Compared with Other
Developed Countries (2)
  • With 3rd highest level of public spending on
    health care, U.S. public insurance covered only
    26.5 of population
  • Lower U.S. utilization rates per capita (hospital
    stays and physician visits)
  • Lower supply of expensive technology
  • Higher income medical care pricesnot superior
    health care or better outcomes

14
U.S. Health Care Waste
  • 30-40 of spending yields no value, inefficiently
    producing valuable services
  • CBO Director (2008) future health care
    spendingthe single most important factor
    determining the nations long-term fiscal
    condition
  • Evidence-based physician practice needed to
    reduce variability

15
Health Care Fraud Abuse
  • FBI 2009 estimates 75-250 B
  • U.S. Justice Department HHS Inspector General
    investigate, convict and exclude providers
  • 2009 Health Care Fraud Prevention and
    Enforcement Action Team using new technology to
    identify and analyze suspected fraud

16
Major Contributors to Increases in Health
Expenditures
  • New diagnostic treatment technology
  • Growth in older population
  • Medical specialization
  • Uninsured, underinsured populations
  • Labor intensity
  • Reimbursement system incentives

17
New Diagnostic Treatment Technology
  • Equipment, devices pharmaceutical agents,
    requiring advanced personnel training new
    personnel roles
  • Computed tomography scanning, Magnetic resonance
    imaging, PET scanning
  • Pacemakers, implantable cardio-converters
  • Drugs and drug marketing to consumers

18
Aging Population
  • Since 1900, 65 year olds tripled in number
  • 85 year old projected at 8.9 M by 2030
  • Major consumers of hospital inpatient care
  • Advanced age accompanied by chronic conditions
    requiring surgeries, drug therapies

19
Medical Specialization
  • 60 of physicians are specialists
  • Americans demand specialty care and use of
    diagnostic testing
  • Managed care relaxing hurdles to specialty care
    referrals

20
Uninsured and Under-insured
  • 47 million, 16 of Americans
  • Almost 75 of uninsured in households with at
    least one full-time worker
  • No insurance late care, medical complications,
    emergency care, avoidable hospitalizations
  • Costs passed to insurance premiums, taxes

21
Labor Intensity
  • People- centered services require high staff to
    consumer ratio
  • New technologies require new, technically trained
    personnel
  • Aging population contributes to home care, other
    personnel needs
  • 3.2 M new jobs by 2014 will be in health services

22
Economic Incentives
  • Traditional payment for piece-work drove high
    utilization
  • Managed care, prospective payment dulled
    incentives
  • System still largely physician and hospital
    driven with continuing incentives for over-use

23
Private Health Insurance
  • 1800s movement to insure workers against lost
    wages due to work injuries later coverage added
    for serious illness
  • Insurance payments to medical care providers not
    until 1930s

24
Health Insurance Concepts
  • Antithetical to insurance premise of guarding
    against unlikely events, health insurance evolved
    to pay for both routine and unexpected events
  • Indemnity coverage protected from all costs of
    care prevailed 1930s-1970 introduction of
    managed care

25
Blue Cross/Blue Shield
  • 1930 Baylor University teachers contract with
    Baylor, TX hospital to cover inpatient services
    on an annual basis
  • Model for Blue Cross development
  • Blue Shield for physician payment followed in
    1940s with AMA financing of Association of
    Medical Care plans

26
Insurance Transformed Health Care (1)
  • Established hospitals as centers of medical care
    proliferation technology
  • Put hospital care within easy reach of working
    population
  • Annual hospital admissions 50 higher for covered
    individuals than nation as a whole by late 1930s

27
Insurance Transformed Health Care (2)
  • Private insurance countered forces that lobbied
    for national health insurance, strongly opposed
    by private medicine
  • Focused government insurance on low-income
    individuals
  • Stimulated American Hospital Assn. local
    hospitals to subsidize semi-private and ward care
    for low-income populations

28
Features of Blue Cross Blue Shield
  • Initially, not-for-profit corporations
    community rated (without regard to demographics,
    occupation, etc.), later, experience- rated to
    compete with for-profit companies
  • Since 1990s, many plans converted to for-profit
    status

29
Commercial Health Insurance
  • Entered market in decade following Blues
  • Used experience-rating to charge higher premiums
    to less healthy competed with Blues for healthy
    persons with lower premiums
  • By early 1950s surpassed Blues enrollment

30
Managed Care
  • Throughout the 1960s, rapidly increasing Medicare
    expense, quality concerns by government and
    industry health insurance purchasers resulted in
    development of the HMO Act of 1973
  • Many employer groups had used specific,
    contracted arrangements Act opened participation
    to all employers

31
HMO Act of 1973
  • Loans grants for planning, implementing
    combined insurance, health care delivery
    organizations
  • Required comprehensive services for acute and
    preventive care
  • Employers of gt25 mandated to offer HMO option, if
    available fund premiumsto prior plans

32
HMO Fundamentals
  • Links health care provision to prepayment
  • Population, not individual-based reimbursement
  • Financial risk-sharing among providers, insurers,
    consumers
  • Intended to reverse incentives for utilization

33
HMO Models
  • Staff MD employees provide primary care in
    HMO-owned facilities
  • Independent Practice Association Community-based
    MDs serve HMO members on pre-paid,
    fee-for-service, contracted basis
  • Hybrids group practice, network, direct contract

34
Payment Methods
  • Encourage cost-conscious, effective, efficient
    care
  • Capitation per-member per-month fee paid in
    advance whether or not services used
  • Withholds retains percentage of customary fee,
    refunded if targets met

35
Financial Risk-sharing
  • For Providers capitation, withholds, expenditure
    targets
  • For Subscribers co-payments, deductibles

36
Evolution of Managed Care (1)
  • Point of Service (POS) plans spawned by demands
    for out-of-network choices
  • Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs) MDs
    hospitals offer private payers self-insured
    firms negotiated fee discounts in return for
    business volume guarantee (60 of all
    employer-covered workers)
  • Today, virtually all health insurance is some
    form of managed care

37
Evolution of Managed Care (2)
  • Disease Management
  • Use of evidence-based guidelines for subscribers
    with high-risk medical and potentially high-cost
    conditions
  • Identified from claims data
  • Insurer or contracted services to monitor
    condition and ensure compliance

38
Evolution of Managed Care (3)
  • Primary physician gatekeeper role declining in
    importance
  • Subscriber demands for more choice in referrals
  • Staff model decline

39
Managed Care Backlash (1)
  • Organized medicine, consumers protested
    restrictions on choice of providers, referrals,
    other practices
  • Presidential commission est. to review patient
    protections
  • President Clinton imposed patient protections on
    companies supplying federal workers

40
Managed Care Backlash (2)
  • Bipartisan Patient Protection Act proposed in
    1998 never passed
  • State legislatures led with 900 laws
    regulations addressing provider and consumer
    protections

41
Managed Care Backlash (3)
  • Consumer-Driven Health Plans employers response
    to rising costs demands for consumer choice
  • Employees take responsibility for health care
    decisions and cost-consciousness
  • Health care reimbursement or Health Savings
    Accounts using high-deductible policies
  • 2009 8 employee participation

42
Trends in Managed Care Costs (1)
  • 1990s slowest rate of cost growth in years
  • 1998 premiums rose again
  • Insurance underwriting cycle
  • Prescription drug costs
  • Investor pressures
  • Consumer demands for choice

43
Trends in Managed Care Costs (2)
  • 1999-2009, avg. family policy premiums increased
    131 to 13,375
  • Workers contribution 17 single, 27 family
  • 40 hour/week minimum wage worker (7.25/hour)
    gross earnings (before taxes) 15,080

44
Impact of Rising Premiums
  • Higher worker contribution results in dropped
    coverage
  • Employers use benefit buy-downs, reducing
    benefit scope, increasing co-pays, and/or
    deductibles
  • 1 increase in premiums 164,000 additional
    uninsureds

45
Managed Care Report Card
  • 5-year literature review notes failings in dual
    promise to lower costs and increase quality
  • Needed
  • Systematic information systems revamping
  • More appropriate provider incentives
  • Revised, evidence-based clinical processes

46
Managed Care Industry Changes
  • Consolidations mergers 5 publicly traded
    companies now enroll 103 million members, 82 of
    all subscribers
  • Responses to provider/consumer issues
  • States patient protection legislation
  • Loosening of choice on patient referrals
  • Patient access to policies, esp. payment denials

47
PART 2
  • Managed Care Quality
  • Self-funded Insurance Programs
  • Government as Payer
  • Cost and Quality Initiatives
  • State Experiments
  • Future Challenges

48
Managed Care Organizations and Quality
  • American Association of Health Plans est. 1979
    renamed National Committee on Quality Assurance
    (NCQA) in 1990
  • Independent, not-for-profit, funded by
    accreditation fees and revenues from sale of a
    quality indicator compendium on 250 health plans
    serving 50 million Americans

49
NCQA (1)
  • Evaluations accreditation on a voluntary basis
    for
  • Managed care organizations
  • Preferred provider organizations
  • Managed behavioral health organizations
  • New health plans
  • Disease management programs

50
NCQA (2)
  • Accreditation entails rigorous reviews of all
    organization aspects including on-line surveys
    and onsite visits
  • Management, physician credentials, member rights
    responsibilities, preventive health services,
    utilization, medical records, disease management
    programs, outcomes of care, measures of clinical
    processes

51
NCQA (3)
  • Certifications for organizations that provide
  • Provider credentials verifications
  • Utilization management services
  • Disease management services

52
HEDIS (1)
  • Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set
    (HEDIS) evolved from partnership among health
    plans, employers and the NCQA in 1989.
  • Standardized method for MCOs to collect,
    calculate, report performance information to
    facilitate plan comparisons by employers, other
    purchasers consumers

53
HEDIS (2)
  • Data set contains 71 measures of MCO performance
    in 8 domains (Report Cards)
  • Effectiveness of care
  • Accessibility availability of care
  • Satisfaction with care
  • Health plan stability
  • Use of service

54
HEDIS (3)
  • Domains, continued
  • Cost of care
  • Informed health choices
  • Health plan descriptive information

55
HEDIS Promotes Transparency
  • Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
    requires all funded MCOs to report HEDIS data
  • All NCQA accredited plans must publicly report
    their clinical quality data
  • Many states require Medicaid managed care plans
    to report HEDIS data

56
Internal MCO Quality Monitoring
  • Physician performance outcomes monitoring
  • Hospital outcomes quality
  • Disease management programs, e.g.
  • Patient self-management education
  • Risk stratification
  • Outreach with clinical specialists

57
Self-Funded Insurance Programs (1)
  • Large employer, union or trade association
    collects premiums, pays medical benefits claims
    instead of using a commercial carrier
  • Actuarial firm may set premiums
  • Third party administrator (TPA) administers
    benefits, pays claims, collects utilization data,
    manages expensive cases

58
Self-Funded Insurance Programs (2)
  • Employer Advantages
  • Avoid administrative charges of commercial
    carriers
  • Avoid state premium taxes
  • Accrue interest on reserves
  • Exemption from ERISA minimum benefits liability
    for plan coverage denial decisions

59
Government as Payer A System in Name Only (1)
  • Early focus military, government employees,
    special populations, e.g. Native Americans
  • Now Medicare, Medicaid, U.S. Public Health
    Service hospitals, state, local, long-term
    psychiatric facilities, Veterans Affairs,
    military dependents, workers compensation,
    public health protection, service grants

60
Government as Payer A System in Name Only (2)
  • System Mosaic of reimbursement,
    vendors/purchaser relationships, matching funds,
    direct services, e.g.
  • Contracts with providers, not direct service
    provision (Medicare, Medicaid, grants)
  • Federal with State matching funds (Medicaid)
  • Direct services (Veterans Affairs)

61
Medicare Historical Significance
  • 1965 Title XVIII of Social Security Act
  • All Americans 65 yrs. entitled to health
    insurance benefits 20 million entered system in
    1965.
  • Financed by payroll taxes
  • Conceded accreditation, administration to private
    sector-JCAHONow JC
  • Hospital payments by local Blue Cross
    intermediaries

62
Initial Medicare Components
  • Part A Mandatory hospital coverage, outpatient
    diagnostics, extended care facilities, home care
    post-hospitalization funded by Social Security
    payroll taxes.
  • Part B voluntary MD coverage, tests, medical
    equipment, home health funded by beneficiary
    premiums matched with federal revenues
  • Cost sharing deductibles, co-insurance medi-gap
    policies

63
AdditionalMedicare Components
  • Part C Managed Care Options for Private Health
    Plan Enrollment (1997)
  • Part D Prescription Drug Coverage (2003)

64
Growth in Medicare Expenditures
  • Costs rose much more rapidly than expected
  • 1976 Most cost growth due to hospital personnel,
    non-personnel and profits
  • Early amendments added covered services,
    increased costs quality concerns escalated
    through 70s and 80s.
  • Later amendments addressed cost growth reductions
    and quality improvement

65
Medicare Cost Containment Quality Improvement
Measures (1)
  • Comprehensive Health Planning Act (1966)
    organize local health planning
  • Professional Standards Review Organizations
    (1972) review Medicare hospital care.
  • Health Systems Agencies (1974) plan for health
    resources based on population needs (replaced
    CHP) plans based on local population needs

66
Medicare Cost Containment Quality Improvement
Measures (2)
  • OBRA 1980, 1981 amendments to reduce hospital
    lengths of stay, advocating home care
  • Tax Equity Fiscal Responsibility Act (TEFRA)
    1982 Peer Review Organizations (PROs) replaced
    PSROs, providing clearer cost/quality criteria
  • 2001 renamed PROs to QIOs (Quality Improvement
    Organizations)

67
Medicare Cost Containment Quality Improvement
Measures (3)
  • DRGs (1983) Shifted Medicare from
  • Pre-set hospital case reimbursement based on
    diagnosis using the International Classification
    of Disease (ICDA) codes
  • Rewarded efficient care, financially penalized
    inefficiency
  • Other insurers followed lead

68
DRG Implementation (1)
  • Predictions of quicker/sicker discharges proved
    unfounded
  • Federal prospective Payment Assessment Commission
    (ProPac) established to review quality
  • Post-implementation research demonstrated no
    deleterious effects on patient outcomes

69
DRG Implementation (2)
  • Slowed cost growth through length of stay
    reductions, personnel reductions
  • Hospitals realized increased profits
  • Impact of major shifts to outpatient services,
    shifting costs to private pay patients dampened
    cost-containment results

70
DRG Cost Containment Quality Improvement
Measures (3)
  • COBRA 1985 penalties for financially-motivated
    patient transfers
  • Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (1986)
    refined 1985 COBRA

71
Cost Containment Quality Improvement Measures
(4)
  • Physician Fees Rapidly rising Medicare payments
    and specialty services prompted action
  • 1987-1989 price freeze ineffective results
    suggested offset by increased volume
  • 1992 RBRVS Pay same amount for office
    procedures whether provided by specialist or
    primary physician incentives for primary care
    practice updated by AMA specialty societies

72
HIPAA
  • 1996 Kennedy-Kassenbaum Bill
  • Reaction to failed Clinton National Health
    Security Act
  • Prohibited coverage denial due to pre-existing
    health condition
  • Ensured continued coverage between employers
  • Established portable Medical Savings Accounts

73
Cost Containment Quality Improvement Measures
(5)
  • Balanced Budget Act of 1997
  • Predictions of Hospital Trust Fund insolvency
  • Medicare unsustainable w/o cuts in other
    programs, increased taxes budget deficits
  • Medicare f-f-s outmoded in MCO environment
  • Medicare gaps for low income populations

74
Balanced Budget Act of 1997
  • Reduce Medicare spending growth rate over 5 years
    through direct and indirect cost reductions
  • Fund State Child Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)
    to enroll 10 million Medicaid-eligible children
  • Introduce Medicare managed care
  • Enact demonstration projects on quality cost
    containment

75
Balanced Budget Act Provisions
  • New Medicare Part C-managed care
  • Demonstration projects
  • Prevention initiatives
  • Provider payment reductions
  • Anti-fraud abuse provisions
  • Rural hospital initiatives
  • Outpatient Nursing Home Prospective Payment

76
Balance Budget Act Outcomes
  • Significant decrease in Medicare spending growth
    through 2002 68 B in savings
  • Private insurers entry through Medicare Part C
  • Successful SCHIP implementation
  • Fraud abuse financial recoveries

77
Responses to BBA
  • Strong resistance from affected groups
  • Balanced Budget Refinement Act (1999) to curtail
    MCO withdrawals from Medicare Choice (Part C)
  • Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2000 restored
    17 B in cuts, postponed/adjusted new payment
    schemes

78
Ongoing Medicare Cost Reduction Quality
Improvement Initiatives (1)
  • 2001 CMS Quality Initiative to monitor
    conformance with standards of care
  • Hospitals, nursing homes, home health care
    agencies, physicians, other facilities
  • Medicare Quality Monitoring System
  • Monitors quality of care delivered to Medicare
    f-f-s beneficiaries

79
Ongoing Medicare Cost Reduction Quality
Improvement Initiatives (2)
  • Hospital Pay-for-Performance plans to reward
    positive patient results efficient care
  • Hospital Compare website 20 criteria assessing
    hospital conformity with evidence-based practice
  • Beginning in 2008 No reimbursement for
    treatment of hospital acquired infections
    investigating other options for never happen
    events and resulting treatment costs

80
Ongoing Medicare Cost Reduction Quality
Improvement Initiatives (3)
  • Hospital Consumer Assessment of Health Care
    Providers and Systems surveys added to Hospital
    Compare to provide patient perspectives on
    hospital experience.

81
Medicaid and the SCHIP
  • 1965 Title XIX of Social Security Act
  • Mandatory joint federal-state program
  • Shared state support based on states per capita
    income
  • Basic insurance coverage for 47 M low income
    individuals
  • 16 of personal health service spending 41 of
    nursing home care

82
Medicaid Scope
  • Federal government establishes broad guidelines
    requirements are state-established
  • Low income families and children
  • Long-term care for older and disabled individuals
  • Supplemental coverage for low-income Medicare
    beneficiaries for non-Medicare covered services

83
Federally Mandated Medicaid Services
  • Inpatient, outpatient hospital services
  • Physician services
  • Diagnostic services
  • Nursing home care for adults
  • Home health care
  • Preventive health screening
  • Pregnancy related child health services
  • Family planning services

84
Medicaid Expenditure Growth
  • Growth in eligible populations, longevity
  • Provider payment increases
  • Disproportionate share hospital program
  • Growth in intensive long term care
  • Increased survival of low birth weight infants

85
Medicaid Funding
  • Personal income tax, corporate and excise taxes
  • Unlike Medicare, no entitlement a transfer
    payment from more affluent to needy individuals
  • Direct reimbursement to providers no intermediary

86
Medicaid Managed Care
  • 1990s States experimented with Medicaid managed
    care to stem 300 growth since 1980.
  • 1993 Federal waivers allowing mandatory managed
    care accelerated enrollment.
  • 1997 BBA lifted all waiver requirements
  • 50 states participate majority of recipients in
    managed care

87
Childrens Health Insurance Program
  • BBA targeted enrollment of 5 M children with
    federal matching funds, 1998-2007
  • By 2008, 7 M enrolled but 8.1 M remained
    uninsured
  • Reauthorized in 2009 through 2013 with
    enhancements

88
FIGURE 7-7 Number of Children Ever Enrolled in
the Childrens Health Insurance Program.
Source Childrens Health Insurance Statistical
Enrollment Data System (SEDS) 1/29/09
89
Medicaid Quality Initiatives
  • The Center for Medicaid State Operations (CMSO)
    develops implements Medicaid SCHIP quality
    initiatives with state programs
  • Division of Quality, Evaluation Health Outcomes
    provides technical assistance to states for
    quality improvement initiatives

90
Medicaid Quality Strategies
  1. Evidence-based care
  2. Payment aligned with quality
  3. Health information technology
  4. Partnerships with internal external expert
    organizations
  5. Information dissemination, technical assistance,
    sharing best practices

91
Future Prospects
  • Little federal action 2000-2008 left major gaps
    in plans for cost control and access improvement
  • States experimented with universal coverage since
    2003
  • 2008 presidential election focused on swift,
    major health care reforms

92
State Experiments
  • Maine make affordable coverage available to all
    decrease cost growth, expand Medicaid, improve
    quality
  • Massachusetts personal responsibility mandate
    with government subsidy
  • Vermont government, employer premium assistance
    state-wide plan for preventing and managing
    chronic conditions

93
Future Challenges
  • Moral dilemma defining values about allocations
    of resources
  • Breaking lose from old philosophies, value
    systems and politics in implementing the Patient
    Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010
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