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In a recent post, Dr. David Himmelstein provides a critique of cost-control ideas being discussed in Massachusetts and elsewhere, and closes with his argument in favor of a single public financing program.

Discussions about who pays — whether it’s a single-payer or otherwise — are, fundamentally, discussions about cost-shifting. But cost-shifting does little to get at the relentless underlying drivers of health care costs. And what’s driving up health insurance costs are skyrocketing medical costs, which consume roughly 87 cents of every health insurance dollar (Mark Farrah Associates; 2006 MA HMO Enrollment Trends & Financial Performance). Dr. Himmelstein’s call for a limit on the “profusion of expensive high tech facilities” is well taken, but it is only part of the problem. The ever-increasing cost of inpatient and outpatient hospital care, prescription drugs, medical liability and defensive medicine will not be tamed by implementing a single public financing program. Rand researcher Beth McGlynn reported that only half of all health care dollars are spent on appropriate medical care. Fixing this failed demand curve will first require that all players within the health care system have quality and cost information, combined with innovative health insurance plans.

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Dr. Himmelstein also claims that prevention and disease management will not reduce overall health care spending. Using a reference to a 1986 book, he argues that smoking actually reduces health care costs because smokers die sooner, thereby saving years of costly medical care. It’s a provocative argument, but the logic doesn’t hold up. The analysis does not appear to account for the costs associated with treating smokers during their lifetimes — a lifetime being extended all the time by expensive procedures and equipment — or societal costs such as lost productivity. The Centers for Disease Control and the Massachusetts Department of Public Health offer some staggering statistics. In the year 2000, smoking cost Massachusetts a total of $4.4 billion — $2.8 billion in health care expenses and $1.6 billion in lost productivity. Neonatal health care associated with smoking costs us $20,000 a day alone. We need to remain focused on prevention and disease management efforts to ensure the most optimal results are achieved. Investment in disease prevention and management will produce improved outcomes and save dollars only when the patient and their physician have information and incentives to follow clinical protocols over a sustained period of time.

Finally, Dr. Himmelstein claims that higher co-payments and deductibles will do nothing to reduce costs, and he cites some consumer behavior in single-payer Canada as evidence. But his argument ignores two key points about Canada. One, the volume of health care demand and supply in the U.S. dwarfs that of Canada. Two, many Canadians actually buy supplemental health insurance to fill their single-payer gaps. Co-payments and deductibles are not about shifting costs to consumers; they are about giving consumers “skin in the game” and thereby changing behavior.

Creating a single public financing program will never address the underlying factors driving up the cost of health care in the U.S. and Massachusetts. Let’s not be distracted from the difficult but ultimately more meaningful effort in Massachusetts to understand and address the root causes of our unsustainable medical cost trend.

Eric Schultz is the President and CEO of Fallon Community Health Plan

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Comments
  • Ann Malone, RN posted:
    Comment posted April 8th, 2008 at 10:51 am

    Priceless quote that says it all from Mr Schultz, an HMO Executive!:

    “Co-payments and deductibles are not about shifting costs to consumers; they are about giving consumers “skin in the game” and thereby changing behavior.”

    As my niece would say, “yeah, right”. I dare say that most MA health care professionals–the people who actually PROVIDE HEALTH CARE–would agree that Mr. Schultz’s perspective is more a part of the problem than the solution.

    I invite Mr. Schultz to have a public debate with me over the points he makes here, or perhaps he would prefer a debate with Dr. Himmelstein–or the both of us–and Mr. Schultz can bring along a colleague, too.

    Only through open dialogue in community forums across the state can the public finally have an opportunity to understand and address the root causes of our “unsustainable medical cost trend” and to make well-informed decisions on whether or not to support streamlined single payer public financing for a program of affordable comprehensive coverage for all.

    I await your reply, Mr. Schultz.
    Sincerely, Ann Eldridge Malone, RN, MSN
    ann-dot-eldridge-dot-malone–at–gmail.com

    —-
    To learn more about streamlined single payer financing, there are a number of excellent online resources to help you get started:
    1. http://www.MassCare.org/about (statewide coalition)
    2. http://www.amsa.org/uhc (American Medical Students)
    3. http://www.pnhp.org (Physicans Nat’l Health Program)
    4. http://www.healthcare-now.org (Nat’l community group)
    and
    5. herndonalliance.org/tools.php
    Herndon’s projects provide new and important tools for health reform in the public interest.

  • Leonard Glantz posted:
    Comment posted April 9th, 2008 at 10:36 am

    David Himmelstein is quite correct when he says smoking cessation will not reduce health care costs. The problem with the numbers used by the Department of Public Health’s is that they do not take into account the added costs of longevity. Smokers and non-smokers actually die from the same things-heart disease, cancer and strokes. The difference is that smokers tend to die of these conditions earlier in their lives and therefore do not incur the additional expenses associated with longevity and particularly extreme longevity. This is also true of reducing obesity. For a detailed analysis see Lifetime Medical Costs of Obesity: Prevention No Cure for Increasing Health Expenditure http://medicine.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pmed.0050029#cor1
    It is also quite clear that cancer rates will be increasing over time because aging is the primary risk factor for cancer. Cancer care is expensive and this will inevitably lead to spending even more resources on the care of the elderly.
    None of this is to say that we should not spend resources on smoking cessation and obesity reduction. What it does mean, however, is that we cannot justify these programs on cost-saving. Rather it requires us to spend money on these programs because it is the right thing to do, an argument that is rarely seen in the healthcare cost debate. The discussion of health care costs will be much better informed, although more difficult, what we address the issue of the proper and ethical way to spend limited resources on healthcare. And the driving force should not be how we save money but how we make the lives of people better even when it costs money.

  • Michelle Rodriguez posted:
    Comment posted September 26th, 2009 at 10:34 am

    I know exactly what you mean. I’ve been a smoker for decades and although I know it’s killing me I don’t have the willpower to quit. But I found these new, “healthy” cigarettes that let me get my fix without damaging my lungs. Check out my blog!

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