January 6th, 2009
National health care spending grew at its lowest rate in nearly a decade in 2007, largely as a result of slower spending on prescription drugs, according to a report by government analysts published today in the new January/February 2009 issue of Health Affairs. The analysts from the National Health Statistics Group in the CMS Office of the Actuary report that health care spending grew 6.1 percent in 2007, down slightly from 6.7 percent in 2006 and the slowest rate of growth since 1998. Overall, health care spending reached $2.2 trillion, or $7,421 per person.
Health care and the economy. Health spending growth overall outpaced the slowing economy and consumed a larger portion of gross domestic product in 2007, reaching 16.2 percent, up from 16 percent in 2006. Although prescription drug spending slowed significantly in 2007, reaching its lowest rate of growth in 45 years, most other health care services grew at about the same rate or faster from 2006 to 2007, the government said. Writing in today’s New York Times, Robert Pear noted: “In recessions, when the economy contracts, health spending usually continues to increase. So federal economists and statisticians said that health spending probably accounted for an even larger share of the nation’s economic output in 2008.”
Prescription drugs. The slowdown in the rate of growth for prescription drug spending contributed to more than half of the overall deceleration of growth in national health spending. Spending for prescription drugs grew 4.9 percent in 2007 to $227.5 billion, down from 8.6 percent in 2006, and the slowest rate of growth since 1963. “A tough time to be in be in the drug business,” noted today’s Wall Street Journal Health Blog. Read the rest of this entry »
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January 5th, 2009
On Saturday, President-elect Barack Obama highlighted health information technology as part of his plan to improve the economy and health system. In his weekly address, Obama said: “To save not only jobs, but money and lives, we will update and computerize our health care system to cut red tape, prevent medical mistakes, and help reduce health care costs by billions of dollars each year.”
As the National Journal’s Tech Dose Daily reported, Obama is scheduled to meet next week with leaders from both parties to discuss his plan. Health IT wonks eagerly noted the attention. On The Health Care Blog, David Kibbe and Brian Klepper offer an updated “Open Letter” to the Obama Administration on Health IT today.
Amidst the enthusiasm, readers may well ask how these “billions of dollars” of savings will be achieved. Many of the cost estimates build on the RAND Health IT project that estimated fully implemented electronic medical records could save the U.S. health system $81 billion per year [free access article]. Another early estimate by Jan Walker and colleagues at Partners HealthCare placed the value of “electronic health care information exchange and interoperability between providers (hospitals and medical group practices) and independent laboratories, radiology centers, pharmacies, payers, public health departments, and other providers” at $77.8 billion per year [free access article].
Some analysts, questioned the estimates saying, “it ain’t necessarily so.” Read the rest of this entry »
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December 31st, 2008
As we close out 2008, here is a look back at the Health Affairs Blog posts that attracted the most readers this year. Analysis of health reform plans from the presidential candidates and a look ahead to policy options under an Obama Administration garnered the most attention. If you missed any of these posts, happy reading. Best wishes to all in the New Year!
- Obama’s Health Policy Options: 3 Scenarios
by Jeff Goldsmith
- Covering The Uninsured: Cheap At Twice the Price
by Henry Aaron
- Indiana: Health Care Reform Amidst Colliding Values
by Mitchell Roob and Seema Verma
- U.S. Worst At Beating Death From Preventable Illness
by Jane Hiebert-White
- The McCain Critique: Out Of Touch And Short Of Ideas
by David Cutler
- Health Plan Scoring That Runs Out Of Bounds
by Tom Miller
- Minority Health Legislation In The 110th Congress
by Dora Hughes
- Medical Homes And Medical ‘Home Runs’?
by Arnold Milstein
- McCain, Obama Health Plans Critiqued
by Jane Hiebert-White
- Obama And Health Policy: Campaign Successes And Governing Plans
by John Iglehart
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December 23rd, 2008
Ever since an 18-year-old New York woman died tragically in 1984 under the care of medical residents who—in the view of her family—were overworked and undersupervised, the subject of the duty hours of physician trainees has simmered in the academic medical community and, on occasion, among public policymakers. Now, as the consequence of a new study by the Institute of Medicine (IOM), these issues will reemerge in a robust fashion again, and the leading questions will focus on how to ensure patient safety while maintaining rigorous training programs.
The IOM study was requested by four members of Congress—all of whom are senior members of the House Energy and Commerce Committee—as part of the panel’s investigation into preventable medical errors. They are Chairman John Dingell (D-MI), ranking Republican Joe Barton of Texas, Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI), and Rep. Ed Whitfield (R-KY). In a letter (dated March 29, 2007), the representatives directed the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to contract with the IOM to study “medical errors associated with physician and resident work schedules.”
In particular, the legislators said their interest in the subject “was recently heightened” by a study funded by AHRQ and published in PLoS Medicine that “found medical errors resulting in adverse events, including death, due to sleep-deprived and over-extended medical residents and interns, substantiating previously held concerns about physician work schedules.” Read the rest of this entry »
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December 12th, 2008
Yesterday President-elect Barack Obama nominated Sen. Tom Daschle (D-SD) as his choice for Secretary of Health and Human Services. Additionally, Obama asked Sen. Daschle to lead a new White House Office of Health Reform and nominated Jeanne Lambrew, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, as the deputy director of the office. Lambrew has written a book on health reform with Daschle, served in President Clinton’s administration at the Office of Management and Budget, and was an informal adviser on health care to Sen. Hillary Clinton during the campaign. She wrote in Health Affairs with John Podesta on the challenge of extending and improving health coverage [free access article].
Last night, in an interview on the PBS NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, Health Affairs Editor-in-Chief Susan Dentzer noted that the nomination of Daschle to these dual health leadership positions may give policy watchers some indication of where an Obama administration is heading in thinking about health reform:
“I think it tells us a little bit about the substance of the proposal that could likely emerge and also about the process. On the substance, Sen. Daschle has very much been in-sync with the kind of thinking that was evident in the Obama campaign plan on health reform, that is to say around such concepts as shared responsibility, everybody has to pay into the system, employers, individuals, the government….
It also tells us something very important about the process, which is that, unlike what happened during the Clinton health reform, this is not going to be a plan that is cooked up in the White House and brought out and pushed on to Congress. Quite the contrary, it’s going to be a plan that emerges largely from the Congress. We know that key officials in Congress — Sen. Max Baucus, who chairs the Finance Committee, Sen. Ted Kennedy, who chairs the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee — are working together already on a plan…. There’s going to be very, very active engagement.”
Linking Health Reform To Economy. In the press conference announcing the nominations, Obama linked the importance of tackling health reform to the economy, saying: ”If we want to overcome our economic challenges, then we must finally address our health care challenge.” Dentzer elaborated on this point in her NewsHour interview: Read the rest of this entry »
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December 12th, 2008
A new edition of the Health Wonk Review posted this week highlights a round-up of health policy bloggers on prospects for reform in an Obama administration, the intersection of health care and the economy, and more. Vince Kuraitis of e-CareManagement Blog, offers a Dragnet-style “just the facts” spin for his turn at hosting the biweekly blog compilation. Also out today, Kaiser Daily Health Report offers its Friday Blog Watch. The Kaiser health blog round-up appears every Tuesday and Friday.
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December 5th, 2008
Just after the historic inauguration of President Barack Obama, join health policy makers in Washington, D.C. for the 2009 National Health Policy Conference, co-sponsored by Health Affairs and AcademyHealth. The event takes place February 2-3, 2009 and will feature senior officials from the Obama Administration and Congress. Other confirmed panels include:
- The impact of health care reform on public programs
- State lessons for health reform
- The impact of health care reform on employers
- How to fund health care reform
Register today to learn where health care reform is headed tomorrow.
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December 3rd, 2008
If you listen to National Public Radio’s (NPR) “All Things Considered” on Saturday afternoons, recently you heard the voice of Narrative Matters author Nataly Kelly. Her on-air commentary about being a medical interpreter was excerpted from her Narrative Matters essay in the November/December 2008 issue of Health Affairs. For a story of a medical tragedy caused by a hospital not using a professional medical interpreter, read this post on the Health Affairs Blog.
Narrative Matters essays are good listening as well as good reading. You can listen to several other Narrative Matters authors reading from their essays on NPR as well.
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December 2nd, 2008
Health reform ideas and policy proposals for President-elect Barack Obama to consider topped the most-read list on Health Affairs Blog in November. Jeff Goldsmith lays out three options for how health reform might proceed. John Iglehart looks at the policy process an Obama administration might take. And John Goodman’s recent post has generated heated commenting. Another post of interest with new extended debate between readers and author is Dennis Cotter’s entry on how Medicare should incorporate epoetin into its composite payment rate for end-stage renal disease. Additional comments are always welcome. To stay on top of new postings, sign up for email or RSS feed alerts.
- Obama’s Health Policy Options: 3 Scenarios
by Jeff Goldsmith
- Obama And Health Policy: Campaign Successes And Governing Plans
by John Iglehart
- AmeriCares Plan: A McCain-Obama Hybrid Proposal
by Ron Klar
- Expanding Primary Care: A Call To Action
by John Iglehart
- McCain And Obama Health Plans: An Authors’ Roundtable
With Mark Pauly, Katherine Swartz, And Gail Wilensky
by Parmeeth M.S. Atwal
- Eulogies: Allan Rosenfield, Paul Rogers, And Michelle Mayer
by Susan Dentzer
- Indiana: Health Care Reform Amidst Colliding Values
by Mitchell Roob and Seema Verma
- The Obama-Romney-McCain Plan
by John Goodman
- Health Plan Scoring That Runs Out Of Bounds
by Thomas Miller
- Primary Care: Divergent Paths In U.S. And Abroad
by John Iglehart
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November 21st, 2008
Time to catch up on health policy blogging highlights? The latest Health Wonk Review offers a post-election round-up hosted by Louise Norris of The Colorado Health Insurance Insider blog. Earlier, David Harlow of HealthBlawg took a turn at hosting the HWR and highlighted some terrific posts on health spending and the economy.
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December 30th, 2008
Sporting a stethoscope and a uniform, the Surgeon General has functioned as the nation’s doctor since 1871. Many have been exemplary. In the 1970s, after Dr. Julius Richmond kicked off Head Start, he launched a series of reports on the health of the nation. (Healthy People 2010, our next report card, will tell us how we’re doing.) In the 1980s, Dr. C. Everett Koop explained HIV/AIDS to us by sending a brochure about the epidemic to every household. In the 1990s, Dr. David Satcher helped us recognize and acknowledge the grave disparities in health among Americans and how we can reduce them.
But over the past 50 years, even as these valiant efforts and life-saving programs saved countless lives and raised awareness, our health care system has fallen apart – and more recently, the Surgeon General’s voice has been muted. Now that President-elect Barack Obama has proposed Tom Daschle and Jeanne Lambrew to lead his new health reform team, it’s time for us to redefine the Surgeon General’s role as someone who can not only diagnose what’s wrong with our health care system but work with us, as a team, to fix it.
We have been living in denial for quite a while, thinking that ours is the best health care system in the world. The truth is that large numbers of Americans have no or limited access to good medical care. We have spotty results from a system costing roughly twice as much per person as the rest of the industrialized world; in fact, our health outcomes place us among industrialized countries with the highest rates of infant mortality. People are discharged from hospitals without knowing how to treat common problems like high blood pressure or asthma. Read the rest of this entry »
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December 28th, 2008
By the fourth sentence of the preface to The Silent World of Doctor and Patient, Jay Katz has quietly issued a startling challenge to a fundamental principle of the doctor-patient relationship. He writes:
It took time before I appreciated fully the oddity of physicians’ insistence that patients follow doctors’ orders. During my socialization as a physician I had been taught to accept the idea of doctors’ Aesculapian authority over patients. When I began to doubt this authority, that was the moment when the book began to take shape in my mind.
“The oddity of physicians’ insistence that patients follow doctors’ orders” – the phrase brings you to an abrupt halt. Jay Katz, who wrote those words in his landmark book published nearly a quarter of a century ago, died in late November at the age of 86.
A lengthy New York Times obituary related the life story of this refugee from Nazi Germany, a “physician and a professor at Yale Law School who spent more than 40 years tackling confounding questions on the boundaries between law, medicine, psychology and ethics.” Yet in part because Katz was so far ahead of his time and in part due to the breadth of his many other accomplishments, Katz’s status as the intellectual father of the patient empowerment movement went unmentioned in the Times obituary and remarked on in passing in just a few other places. Read the rest of this entry »
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December 15th, 2008
When Tom Daschle, President-elect Barack Obama’s designate for Secretary of Health and Human Services, published a book earlier this year titled Critical: What We Can Do about the Healthcare Crisis, I saw the favorable reviews and made a mental note to buy and read it. After Obama’s announced choice of Daschle for HHS secretary, this became more salient. It is well worth reading carefully, as it provides some important clues to the likely course of health reform under Obama’s administration.
Any book on health policy by a Democrat needs at least three key ingredients:
1) A collection of personal-interest horror stories about well-meaning citizens who’ve been damaged by our health system (a significant editing challenge since there are, legitimately, millions of these stories).
2) A mention of the widely discredited Himmelstein and Woolhandler fictoid about 31% of U.S. health costs being “administration” (see the McKinsey Global Institute’s 2007 “Accounting for the Cost of Healthcare in the United States” for a more rigorous analysis).
3) A mention of the World Health Organization (WHO) study about how we rank 37th in the world in “health care” despite spending trillions more than any other country (dispatched efficiently earlier this year by Cato’s Glenn Whitman).
You’ll find all three obligatory ingredients in Daschle’s book. What is surprising and refreshing, however, is his thoughtful analysis of Congress’s epic struggle with health reform, particularly the failure to enact it during the Clinton presidency, when Daschle was a senior member of the Senate Democratic majority. Almost 25% of the book is a superb congressional history of health reform going back to 1914. Daschle has done his homework. Read the rest of this entry »
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December 12th, 2008
I visited Cuba last week for an international conference entitled “Medical Education for the 21st Century: Teaching Health for Equity.” Havana is beautiful, dilapidated, and lively. Rickety, vintage Buicks and three-wheeled “coco taxis” ply the streets. Spectacular and decrepit 19th century buildings are being lovingly refurbished by workmen using block and tackle to haul concrete mixed with sewer water to the upper floors. Everyone smokes and pharmaceuticals are in short supply, but infant mortality and longevity rates are among the best in the world. Whatever Cubans think about their government, they extol the country’s medical care system.
Seven hundred people (including 180 Americans) showed up for the conference sponsored the Cuban Ministry of Health and the Pan American Health Organization. Some surely came in the spirit of getting to Cuba before change came (Cuba in the late Castro and early Obama years), but most were there for the topic — health equity in medical education, the social accountability and social mission of medical schools. Medical education in many parts of the world is available only to the children of political, social, and financial elites. Health systems often reflect this disparity with little medical care available outside of the wealthier sector of society. It was concern about these ubiquitous and hard-wired inequities that that drew most of the conferees. Read the rest of this entry »
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