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Drivers of Health Care in Hawaii Hawaii Economic Association Virginia Pressler, MD, MBA, FACS Director, Hawaii Department of Health June 4, 2015 Life Expectancy: A Basic Health Outcome About 3 years OECD, World Bank The US Health Care Return on Investment OECD, Commonwealth Fund, World Health Organization Health and Social Spending, Total, % of GDP (2012) 50 45 40 35 30 25 For each $1 in health care, about $1 is spent on social services in the US. 20 15 10 For each $1 in health care, over $2 is spent on social services, on average in OECD countries. 5 0 Health Social OECD Hawaii is the Healthiest State in the Country • Strengths • Relatively low prevalence of obesity • Relatively low rate of preventable hospitalizations • Relatively low rate of cancer deaths • Challenges • High prevalence of binge drinking • High incidence of infectious disease • Low immunization coverage among children www.americashealthrankings.org But Disparities Persist… Rank County 1 Honolulu (HO) 2 Maui (MA) 3 Kauai (KU) 4 Hawaii (HA) www.countyhealthrankings.org Based On Where You Live in Hawaii… www.healthtrends.org Your Access to Health Care… Hawaii Primary Care Data Book, 2012 Other Social Determinants of Health… County / Uninsured Rate (Clinical Care) Adult Smoking (Health Behaviors) Unemployment (Social & Economic) Housing Shortage (Physical Environment) Honolulu 7% 15% 4.3% 27% Maui 9% 15% 5.1% 32% Kauai 8% 16% 5.7% 28% Hawaii 10% 19% 6.8% 28% Especially NH/PI… Hawaii’s betterthan-average health status is not shared by Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander populations. 5x 3x 2x The breast cancer death rate is five times higher The colon cancer death rate is three times higher The obesity rate is twice as high 4x 3x The heart disease death rate is four times higher The stroke death rate is three times higher 3x The suicide death rate is at least three times higher Most chronic diseases are strongly associated and causally linked with four particular risk factors World Health Organization Word Cloud from Hawaii’s 2013 Assessment Healthcare Association of Hawaii Length of Life Health Outcomes Quality of Life Uninsured rate Clinical Care (15%) Quality of care Access to care Tobacco use Diet & exercise Health Factors Health Behaviors (30%) Genetic Predisposition (10%) Substance use Sexual activity Unemployment Social & Economic Factors (40%) Education Income Family & social support Community safety Policies and Programs Physical Environment (5%) Housing & transit Built environment Air & water quality The “social determinants of health” A Hawaii Model for Social Determinants • Upstream “root causes” are socio-economic, political and other factors that influence living conditions and social circumstances that support or impede health • Downstream results are effects or outcomes of the root causes. A New State Health Improvement Plan Community Health Needs Assessment (2013) Health in All Policies Public Health, and Human Services Private Sector Private Health Care System Individuals and Families Chronic disease and health risk behavior drive poor outcomes Sugar Sweetened Beverage tax Behavioral health and chronic disease integration Establish corporate culture of health and wellness Pay-for-Quality Improved family health literacy Certain groups and places are impacted disproportionately Safe Routes to School policies Implement SNAP bonus for fruits and vegetables Food Desert distribution and retail reform Hospital Community Benefit Planning Improved family planning behaviors Cultural and language barriers inhibit interventions Adopt and enforce CLAS standards Certify medical interpreters Corporate diversity education programs Reimburse Community Health Workers Healthy ethnic recipes and substitutes Limited access to care or healthy alternatives Worksite Wellness program incentives Expand telehealth infrastructure Healthy workplace eating and vending policies Health information exchange Chronic disease selfmanagement program participation Community-based solutions are key assets Reintroduce nutritional education and physical education School health integration Participate in Blue Zone initiatives FQHC/DOE schoolbased sealants project Establish ethnic community gardens Root Causes Public Policy Collaboration Improved Outcomes Public Health Milestones in Hawaii Outbreaks of plague, small pox, tuberculosis, etc. Public health nursing established, TB sanitoriums, plantation health. Pre-Paid Health Care Act Plantation housing and sanitation standards Statehood www.healthtrends.org The Department At A Glance • Four Administrations • General Administration, Behavioral Health, Environmental Health, Health Resources • Attached Agencies • Aging, Health Planning, Disabilities Advocacy, Environmental Quality, Language Access, Hawaii Health Systems Corporation • Approximately 2,500 employees and $890,000,000 budget General Powers and Duties • Section 321-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes: (a) The department of health shall have general charge, oversight, and care of the health and lives of the people of the State, and shall pursue as a goal, the achievement of health equity. The department shall consider social determinants of health in the assessment of state needs for health. • The mission of the Department of Health is to protect and improve the health and environment for all people in Hawai‘i. • Over 2,500 employees, 75 programs, and $890M budget Resources • http://www.hawaiihealthmatters.org/ • http://www.healthyhawaii.com/ • http://www.hhdw.org/ • http://health.hawaii.gov/physical-activity-nutrition/choose-healthynow/ • http://hah.org/reports-data/hah-reports/ Mahalo for Contributing to Our Community’s Health