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Health and Wellbeing: Why does America Fare so Badly? Steven A. Schroeder, MD Kinsman Ethics Conference April 11, 2013 Quick Poll How many think U.S. has best medical system? How many have family happy with their own medical care? How many of you want your family to die in an ICU? How many think that the 2010 Affordable Care Act was a good thing? A bad thing? Not sure? NRC/IOM Report: Shorter Lives, Poorer Health* Lack of universal health coverage Weaker foundation in primary care Poor care coordination Greater obesity (though lower smoking rates) Less likely to practice safe sex as teens More car crashes, gun deaths Greater income inequality Highest rate of child poverty * Woolf and Aron. JAMA 2013; 309:771-72 Compared to Peer Countries, Americans do Worse:* Infant mortality and low birth weight Injuries and homicide HIV and AIDS Drug-related deaths Obesity and diabetes Heart disease Chronic lung disease Disability * IOM, U.S. Health in International Perspective, 2013 Why Are Americans so Unhealthy?* Health systems (large # uninsured) Social and economic conditions --higher poverty levels --higher: caloric intake, drug abuse, traffic accidents with alcohol, firearms violence --Poorer education --Weaker social safety net Physical environments (automobile focused) * IOM, 2013 Five Iconic American Beliefs That Impair Population Health* Individual freedom Free enterprise Self-reliance Role of religion Federalism * IOM 2013 report Health Status: United States vs. 33 Other OECD Countries Health Status Measure U.S.A. U.S. Rank in OECD (34) Best Rank of OECD All Women 80.1 22 Japan (85.3) White women 80.5 19 All men 74.8 22 White men 75.3 19 All women, years 19.8 10 White women, years 19.8 10 All men, years 16.8 9 White men, years 16.9 9 Life Expectancy from birth (y)-2010* Sweden (78.4) Life expectancy from age 65/-2010* * White male/female values from 2004 Japan (23) Iceland (18.1) Life Expectancy at Birth in Selected OECD Countries, 1960–2009. Fineberg HV. N Engl J Med 2012;366:1020-1027 Some Good News US does much better for life expectancy after age 75 Life expectancy data at all time high—77.6 years at birth, but ….. – Women: 80.1, men: 74.8 – White women>black women>white men>>>black men – Almost all the recent gains were in upper SES groups; (some declines in poor white women) – Much of those gains are from less use of tobacco Determinants of Health Genetic predisposition Behavioral patterns Environmental exposures Social circumstances Health care Proportions (Premature Mortality) (Premature Mortality) Genetic 30% Social 15% Environment 5% Behavior 40% Source: McGinnis JM, Russo PG, Knickman, JR. Health Affairs, April 2002. Health care 10% Behavioral Causes of Annual Deaths in the United States 435 450 400 365 350 300 250 200 150 85 100 50 43 20 * 112 29 * 17 0 Sexual Behavior Source: Alcohol Motor Vehicle Guns Mokdad et al, JAMA 2004;291:1238-1245 Mokdad et al; JAMA. 2005; 293:293 Flegal KM, Graubard BI, Williamson DF, Gail, MH. Excess deaths associated with underweight, overweight, and obesity. JAMA 2005;293:1861-1867 Drug Obesity/ Smoking Induced Inactivity suffer from mental * Also illness and/or substance abuse Health Health Improves While Disparities Widen Time Health Status—Summary Doing better Oregon is #13/50 states (2012) But at bottom of developed world We may not get enough credit for functional status improvements (new joints, etc.) Major declines in heart disease (multiple reasons) Major opportunities for improvement in tobacco and obesity Can’t improve without more attention to the poor Hard to improve through medical care alone Costs of Medical Care: We’re Number One! Up to 17.6% of GDP in 2010, $2.8 trillion; Netherlands 12%; others < Poor health value for the dollar Tendency to look for painless quick fixes (electronic medical record, pay for performance, comparative effectiveness) Reluctance to take on the involved sectors (pharma, device and insurance industries, hospitals, doctors, unions) Actual and Projected National Health Expenditures, Selected Years Source: Sean Keehan and others (2008). “Health Spending Projections Through 2017: The Baby-Boom Generation is Coming to Medicare.” Health Affairs Web Exclusive, Feb. 26, pp w146. (www.healthaffairs.org) Health Expenditures as a Percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in Selected OECD Countries, 1960–2009. Fineberg HV. N Engl J Med 2012;366:1020-1027 2010 Health Expenditures as a Share of GDP Source: OECD Health Data 2012 Health Care Spending- Per Capita In $US PPP* The U.S. Healthcare Value Shortfall Source: Harvard Business Review, p. 70, April 2010 Years - Estimated Average Life Expectancy IOM Estimates of Sources of Excess Medical Costs* Unnecessary services $210b Inefficiently delivered services $130b Excess administrative costs $190b Prices that are too high $105b Missed prevention opportunities $ 55 Fraud $ 75 Total = $765b, or about 1/3 total expended * 2010 report, based on 2009 expenditures Why Is U.S. Medical Care So Costly?* Physician supply? No (but specialty % very high) Fee for service payment valuations? Yes Health worker incomes? Yes Hospital supply/length of stay? No Proportion intensive care beds? Yes Rate of expensive procedures, and technology in general? Yes!! *Schroeder synthesis Why Is U.S. Medical Care So Costly (Part 2)? Administrative costs? Yes Malpractice, including defensive medicine? (Yes, about $54 b/year; 80% on defensive medicine) Aging population? Not really Patient demand? Yes Lack of cost competition? No, but may be a cost containment strategy Low investment in IT? Maybe Fraud and abuse? Yes THE REFERRAL CHAIN IN HEATH CARE Patient Family Generalist Physician Specialist Physician Tertiary Hospital Community Hospital Intensive Care Intensive Care Key European health care U.S. health care Why Does US Medical Cost Containment Fail? Americans (those who are insured) resist limiting choices Power of industries—device manufacturers and drug companies Power of medical/hospital sectors Strong patient demand for more (e.g., alternative medicine) Surge of new technologies Political hot potato, and lack of accountability focus Time Magazine Criticizes Hospitals Why Not Let Costs Keep Rising? Opportunity costs – – – – Schools The environment Jobs and overseas competition (see General Motors) Other worthy causes Business resistance – Operational costs – Retiree costs – Source of labor disputes Pressure on public programs (Medicare, Medicaid, County Hospitals) Increases the number of uninsured Biggest cause of personal bankruptcies Health Care Priorities* We want the best We want it right now We want choices We want someone else to pay for it If we can’t get it, we will sue * Most countries pick 2. U.S. has all 5 Access to Health Care “Best of systems, worst of systems” Insurance coverage the major barrier; we are unique in large % uninsured. 50.7 million uninsured in 2009 (16.7% population) Gradual decline in employer coverage Shift of expenses to out of pocket Geography, language, literacy, racial barriers also important Why U.S. Tolerates Such a Large Number of Uninsured? Explanations, Rationales and Myths* 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. The numbers are exaggerated Uninsurance is often temporary Many choose to be uninsured The uninsured get care anyway We can’t afford to expand coverage Government is untrustworthy American political system prevents major reform 8. (Poor under-represented politically) *Schroeder SA., The medically uninsured—will they always be with us?, NEJM, 1996; 334:1130-1133. Major Implementation Challenges for the ACA Implementation details tricky and still in progress: --state health exchanges --how does IRS collect penalties? --states have latitude in defining benefits --funding for demonstration projects Obstacles to ACA Implementation Creating the state exchanges: to date only 25/51 states have opted in The Medicaid expansion component: a moving target; to date 23 states have accepted; 13 uncertain; 14 refused House Republican budget tries to undo much of the ACA No funding for certain elements of cost savings—health care workforce task force, IPAB Other Republican attempts to obstruct, in contrast with Medicare in 1965, SCHIP in 2000, Medicare Part D in 2003 Legal Challenge to ACA 26 state attorneys general asked Supreme Court suit to overturn ACA on two grounds: --The individual mandate (first enacted in MA) is unconstitutional. “Can the government require you to eat broccoli?” Yes it can. --The Medicaid expansion is coercive. Yes it is Making Sense of all this In the U.S., entrepreneurialism trumps solidarity Class is the underlying factor in disparities in health and health care. But we tend to conceptualize class as race. Is this unduly divisive? Does it demean people of color to have the implicit equations: White=rich; color=poor? Making Sense (2) Two fundamental issues: (1) opportunity costs of overspending on health care, and (2) how to narrow the class gap in health? Opportunity costs are huge: education, environment, infrastructure. Don’t yet have a safe way politically to even debate these issues, though OR does it better than most Entrenched interests (18% of GDP) will fight all attempts to bend the cost curve Making Sense (3) Narrowing the health and healthcare gap will depend on structural reforms --political campaign finance reform --revitalize labor (more of a force in Europe, with many Labor Parties) --greater voter registration and turnout --reforms within public health and medicine