More doctor visits and hospital stays aren’t the problem. Americans
use roughly the same amount of health services as people in other
affluent nations, the study found.
Instead, health spending may be higher in the U.S. because prices
are steeper for drugs, medical devices, physician and nurse salaries
and administrative costs to process medical claims, researchers
report in JAMA.
“There’s no doubt that administrative complexity and higher drug
prices both matter - as do higher prices for pretty much everything
in U.S. healthcare,” said lead study author Irene Papanicolas of the
London School of Economics and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of
Public Health in Boston.
“These inefficiencies are likely the product of a number of factors
including a reliance on fee-for-service reimbursement, the
administrative complexity of the U.S. health care system and the
lack of price transparency across the system,” Papanicolas said by
email.
For the study, researchers examined international data from 2013 to
2016 comparing the U.S. with 10 other high-income countries: the
U.K., Canada, Germany, Australia, Japan, Sweden, France, Denmark,
the Netherlands, and Switzerland.
In 2016, the U.S. spent 17.8 percent of its gross domestic product
(GDP) on healthcare. Other countries’ spending ranged from a low of
9.6 percent of GDP in Australia to a high of 12.4 percent of GDP in
Switzerland.
A large part of this was administrative costs, which accounted for 8
percent of GDP in the U.S., more than double the average of 3
percent of GDP.
At the same time, the U.S. spent an average of $1,443 per person on
drugs, compared with an average of $749 per person across all of the
countries in the study.
U.S. spending was also higher for imaging and for many of the most
common medical procedures like knee replacements, surgical cesarean
births, and surgeries to repair or unclog blood vessels.
If the U.S. did less imaging and fewer of 25 common procedures, and
lowered prices and the number of procedures to levels in the
Netherlands, it would translate into a savings of $137 billion, Dr.
Ezekiel Emanuel of the Perelman School of Medicine at the University
of Pennsylvania writes in an accompanying editorial.
[to top of second column] |
“Regardless of what is done with the money, it would be more
valuable than paying high prices for a large number of CT and MRI
scans, up to a third of which may be deemed unnecessary and carry
radiation risks, and many expensive but not necessary surgical
procedures,” Emanuel writes.
Life expectancy in the U.S. was the lowest, at 78.8 years, the study
also found. In the other countries, life expectancy ranged from 80.7
to 83.9 years.
Infant mortality rates were highest in the U.S., with 5.8 fatalities
out of every 1,000 live births. For other countries, the average
infant mortality rate was 3.6 fatalities for every 1,000 live
births.
Some individual U.S. states, however, have outcomes on par with
other high-income countries. For example, life expectancy in Hawaii,
Minnesota and Connecticut were similar to other high-income
countries, while life expectancy was much worse in states like
Mississippi.
Inequalities in innovation, costs and outcomes may be reasons the
U.S. lags behind other high-income countries, Stephen Parente of the
University of Minnesota writes in an accompanying editorial.
“Although some states and regions throughout the U.S. serve as
excellent laboratories for best practices, these parts of the U.S.
system need to be shared with greater equity so that underperforming
U.S. regions can and will demand better care,” Parente writes.
One limitation of the study is that researchers lacked information
on the quality of care across all of the countries.
“It is quite challenging to disentangle the share of international
differences in spending driven by differences in the quantity of
care used and differences in the prices paid for that care, given
how difficult it is to measure quality and intensity of care,”
Katherine Baicker, author of a separate editorial and dean of the
Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago, said by
email.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2GqjXuH JAMA, online March 13, 2018.
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |