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Title: American the Exceptional: US Health Care Delivery


1
MODULE V HEALTH CARE POLICY READINGS PART III,
15, 16, 18 6/20 26 27
2
Why Not The Best?U.S. Health Care in Comparative
Perspective
3
  • OF ALL THE FORMS OF INEQUALITY, INJUSTICE IN
    HEALTH CARE IS THE MOST SHOCKING AND INHUMANE
  • MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.

4
  • IF I HAD TO SUM UP THE AMERICAN HEALTH CARE
    SYSTEM IN ONE WORD, THAT WORD WOULD BE CHAOS.
  • PRIMARY CARE
    PHYSICIAN
  • EAST LANSING,
    MICHIGAN

5
A PREFATORY NOTE POWERPOINT FOOTNOTES
  • THIS MODULE FEATURES THREE FOOTNOTE SLIDES (s
    24-26) CONTAINING DETAILED INFORMATION RELEVANT
    TO THE MAIN NARRATIVE (MN).
  • FOOTNOTES APPEAR AT THE END OF THE SECTION ON
    MANAGED CARE THIS COLOR SCHEME DISTINGUISHES
    THEM FROM MN SLIDES.

6
A Comparative Perspective on U.S. Health Care
  • A purely domestic analysis of health care is
    inadequate because it excludes 1) comparative
    evaluation of American health care performance
    2) the potential relevance of foreign health
    care models to the U.S. health care system.
  • (Point2 will receive detailed treatment in
    Module9.)
  • This module focuses on point1 by surveying
    American health care from a comparative
    international perspective. We will also review
    the unique ways in which the U.S. system has
    evolved in recent years.
  • In particular, well be looking at the following
    questions.

7
America the Exceptional US Health Care Delivery
  • In what ways is the U.S. health care system
    exceptional?
  • What factors account for this exceptionality?
  • What are the systems major characteristics?
  • What efforts have been made to reform the system?
  • What have been the results of recent reforms? In
    particular, what has been the impact of managed
    care, and what has been the reaction to it?

8
In What Ways is US Health Care Exceptional?
  • As noted, American society places unusual stress
    on individual responsibility. One consequence has
    been a relatively immature welfare state devoid
    of many benefits services taken for granted
    elsewhere.
  • Preference for private sector health care
    delivery is one aspect of this pattern. Nowhere
    else in the advanced world has government played
    so modest a role in regulating/managing health
    care nowhere else is access to care so dependent
    on specific qualifying criteria. Indeed, the U.S.
    is the only advanced country in which access to
    health care is not an inherent right of
    citizenship.
  • America is likewise exceptional in its high per
    capita health care spending (7). Yet Americans
    are on average no healthier than people in other
    societies that spend far less (8). The American
    health care system is thus exceptional, insofar
    as heavy expenditures have yielded comparatively
    light results (9).

9
PER CAPITA HEALTH EXPENDITURE (1997)
10
HEALTH STATUS INDICATORS, 1995
INFANT MORTALITY INFANT MORTALITY LIFE EXPECTANCY MEN WOMEN LIFE EXPECTANCY MEN WOMEN
U.S. 8.0 72.5 79.2
CANADA 6.0 75.3 81.3
GERMANY 5.3 73.0 79.5
JAPAN 4.3 76.4 82.8
11
HEALTH CARE EXPENDITURES 1970 1997 (IN
PERCENTAGE OF GDP)
12
US Exceptionality The Uninsured
Underinsured.
  • U.S. health care eligibility is based on one or
    more of the following three criteria1)
    employment (private insurance) 2) very low
    income or welfare status (Medicaid) 3) stage of
    life (Medicare). Those without jobs, not old, or
    ---paradoxically---not poor enough therefore
    often have problems securing health insurance.
    Even many employed people---- notably those in
    small business, contingently- or
    self-employed---also often lack adequate
    (perhaps, any) coverage. (Slide 11 provides the
    details)
  • Since most of the uninsured are young, some
    analysts conclude that lack of health care
    protection is not a serious national problem
    after all, the young typically do not need
    medical services nearly as often as do older
    people.
  • But two facts---highly relevant and deeply
    worrisome ---counter such complacent assumptions
    1) the of uninsured people is rising by about1m
    per year(12) 2) officially undefined
    uncounted, the underinsured probably number
    upwards of 100m. Inadequate coverage is thus a
    problem arguably as serious as total lack of
    coverage.

13
HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE, 1997
14
NONELDERLY AMERICANS W/OUT HEALTH INSURANCE1987
1997(CALCULATED AS PERCENTAGE OF THE
POPULATION)
15
What Factors Account for US Exceptionality?
  • Idealist analysts identify cultural
    factors---notably, our individualist ethos and
    suspicion of big government---as crucial in
    accounting for U.S. exceptionality.
  • Structuralists contend that our fragmented
    political system, with its checks and balances
    and divided state - federal jurisdictions, is the
    major source of American exceptionally.
  • While not entirely discounting either of these
    positions, materialists regard the political
    clout of the trillion
  • dollar a year health care industry as the
  • decisive factor obstructing reform.

How incisive!
Lets pare costs by cutting people.
16
U.S. Exceptionality Does the U.S. Have the
Best Health System in the World?
  • Partisans of the existing system claim that it is
    exceptional in the affirmative sense of providing
    the worlds best care.
  • Yet much depends on how best is defined. Thus,
    high tech care, fine medical schools, and large
    cadre of specialist physicians are often cited as
    proof of U.S. excellence.
  • American medical education is certainly---and
    rightfully---a matter of national pride. Yet many
    experts question whether our emphases on advanced
    technology specialized manpower really are
    decisively important, especially since other
    advanced societies attain comparable health care
    outcomes at far less cost.
  • Note, too, that the best U.S. care is only
    available to a small minority the Mayo Clinic
    and Sloan Kettering, nominally available to all,
    actually cater to an elite clientele. Most
    Americans must therefore settle for what is quite
    literally second best that is, care that is good
    by advanced world standards, but hardly in a
    class by itself.

17
The American Health Care Reform Drama Act I HSA
(Enter Stage Center)
  • While reform of the health care system has
    occurred. its primary focus has not been on
    extending protection---as noted, the number of
    uninsured continues to rise---but rather on
    curbing expenditures, which had gone virtually
    out-of-control by the late 1980s.
  • The problem arose from reliance on
    feeforservice (FFS) indemnity insurance, which
    tended to promote overuse. Indeed, in the FFS
    (non)system, patients could be as unrestrained in
    seeking treatment as physicians could be in
    providing it.
  • President Clintons Health Security Act (HSA) of
    1993 was initially hailed as a sensible
    alternative. It would have (1) extended health
    coverage to all Americans (2) established
    regional purchasing alliances to spur price
    competition among newly organized networks of
    providers.
  • The HSA was doomed, however, by business
    opposition and by its own bewildering complexity.
    Its rejection by Congress opened the way to the
    current system of (mostly) for profit managed
    care, in which government has been a follower
    rather than a leader.

18
Act II Managed Care (Enter Stage Right)
  • Few concepts have sparked as much confusion as
    managed care---indeed, patients are often unaware
    that they are being treated in managed care
    settings. Here managed care will be defined as
    health care delivery arrangements designed to
    restrain provider prices and regulate the
    availability of services.
  • Managed care is thus a repudiation of the now
    rapidly fading FFS system. The latter was open,
    loose, and inefficient. In contrast, managed care
    deliverers monitor and regulate all health care
    services, which are in principle only authorized
    when (1) covered by contract (2) deemed
    medically necessary (3) provided at capped,
    discounted, or otherwise reduced cost. Thus,
    managed care hospitalization arrangements
    typically feature provider discounts and hospital
    stays calculated in terms of the minimal
    in-patient recovery time.
  • Although many regard its long term prospects as
    dubious, the new system has certainly been a
    short term cost-saving success (17). However,
    as we shall see (s19 - 23), there is bitter
    controversy about whether managed care
    constitutes an adequate alternative to a
  • foreign -style national health care system.
  • Footnote slide 24 explains why managed care
    has been so elusive a concept.

19
NATIONAL HEALTH EXPENDITURES (NHE), 1970 - 1996
20
Managed Care Bureaucratic and Competitive
Dimensions
  • Managed care incorporates both bureaucratic and
    competitive elements. It is bureaucratic insofar
    as it features elaborate controls on patients
    providers in order to restrain costs. For
    example, under managed care, patients typically
    must receive authorization from their designated
    primary care physician before consulting
    specialists. The primary care physician is thus
    obliged to function as a bureaucratic
    gatekeeper, responsible for deciding whether
    patient resort to expensive specialist services
    is medically necessary.
  • Managed care is also competitive, however, in
    that physicians are often obliged to provide
    services at lower-than-customary prices in order
    to retain their standing as authorized managed
    care providers.
  • More generally, managed care companies compete
    with one another, and can lose crucial market
    share if their prices arent in line with those
    of their competitors. Loss of market share
    devastates share prices, and can threaten a
    companys very existence as profits decline,
    firms lose the capacity to invest in up-to-date
    management information technology, thereby
    endangering their ability to remain as cost
    efficient as their competitors. The immediate
    result is likely to be relatively high prices
    the eventual result, bankruptcy or forced merger.

21
THE CASE FOR MANAGED CARE
  • Its advocates see no alternative to managed care.
    In their view, failure of the cumbersome Clinton
    plan confirmed the folly of relying on government
    in the health care area. Private sector partisans
    see this same message when they survey health
    care worldwide. They conclude that governments
    everywhere add to the expense and detract from
    the quality and efficiency of health care. In
    Britain, for example, the National Health Service
    (NHS), the classic public sector model, has
    recently required a bracing dose of private
    competition as a corrective to its socialist
    planning procedures.
  • Managed care proponents make the following
    specific points in explaining why government
    meddling allegedly results in wasteful muddle
  • The price mechanism is the only accurate and
    flexible indicator of supply and demand. Without
    competitive market pricing as a guide to resource
    allocation, planning defaults to experts, who,
    as often as not, overestimate supply or
    underestimating demand. (Contd on 20).

22
THE CASE FOR MANAGED CARE
  • State-funded systems are notorious for their long
    waiting lists, thereby supposedly confirming what
    happens when public (mis)planning substitutes for
    private competition.
  • Laws inevitably involve coercion, and coercion
    makes for bad medicine skilled professionals
    simply cannot be expected to perform as
    ordered.
  • Public health care policy inevitably reflects
    behind-the-scenes political haggling among
    powerful largely self-interested groups.
  • Legislators lack either the time or expertise to
    make good laws in a highly technical area
    requiring professional insight and experience.
  • Results are what count, and by this inarguable
    standard, managed care has already been a
    resounding success. It has brought the rate of
    medical inflation down from formerly
    stratospheric heights (17), and has introduced
    market discipline and rationality into health
    care delivery. It is not a perfect
    system----there is no such thing---but it
    effectively gets the job done.
  • Whatever problems remain will fade over time.
    That is because, unlike government, market
    suppliers must remain responsive to buyers---in
    this case, employer purchasers, who demand
    value for money. It is this feature of the market
    system that is the best guarantee of quality
    health care.

23
THE CASE AGAINST MANAGED CARE
  • While the case against managed care can be
    classified into three categories---political,
    systemic, and internal---in reality, all three
    are grounded on a single insight. It is that
    health care delivery is inevitably flawed if
    motivated exclusively, or even predominately, by
    profit. While financial incentives have a place
    in medicine, their use must be balanced against
    patient welfare, as determined by medical
    professionals.
  • Those advocating unrestricted reliance on private
    sector managed care have thus overextended an
    essentially sound argument---in the language of
    logical analysis, they have committed the fallacy
    of reductio ad absurdum. More particularly, they
    have conflated the need to use resources
    efficiently with the unrestrained search for
    profits. The former can be reconciled with
    quality patient care through careful planning, as
    in the Canadian system. The latter, however, is
    without limits except as externally imposed.

24
THE CASE AGAINST MANAGED CARE
  • Health care should never simply be treated as a
    commodity, as it is under managed care i.e., it
    is not a item purchased after a rational
    comparison of alternatives. Instead, health care
    is a life necessity dispensed by those whose
    professional judgments inevitably must have
    immediate priority over the judgments of laymen,
    whether consumers (i.e., patients),
    profit-oriented insurers, or government
    bureaucrats. This point deserves emphasis
    because, under managed care, immediate decisions
    made by physicians are indeed often
    second-guessed, and sometimes vetoed, by those
    lacking medical expertise, or on-site knowledge
    of the patient.
  • This does not mean, however, that medical
    decisions should not be strategically
    circumscribed by political ones. As noted, FFS
    indemnity insurance had to be abandoned because
    of the adverse financial consequences of
    virtually unrestricted physician autonomy.
    Needed, then, is a system that allows maximum
    practicable professional discretion, yet obliges
    physicians and medial administrators to
    efficiently manage what are inevitably finite
    resources. (Contd on 23.)

25
THE CASE AGAINST MANAGED CARE
  • While its creation will of course be no mean
    trick, intelligent implementation of this
    principle would provide a humane and rational
    alternative to both FFS and managed care.
  • Such alternatives will be discussed in Module
    9.

26
Why isManaged Care So Difficult to Understand?
  • Managed care is a relative newcomer to the
    health care scene, so that difficulties in
    grasping its meaning are understandable. The
    concept itself is difficult to define (16) , and
    the actual forms of managed care organizations
    (MCO) are still in flux hybrid MCOs abound, with
    textbook types probably being the exception.
    (See s 25 26 for more on this point.)
  • Yet sheer novelty is only one reason why the
    concept of managed care often evokes
    bewilderment. Less noticed but more basic may be
    the cultural tendency to regard concepts as
    things rather than as relationships, thereby
    deepening the confusion. Thus, managed care and
    health maintenance organizations (HMOs) are most
    likely to be envisaged, respectively, as a type
    of health care and an actual place within which
    such care is provided. In reality, however, these
    concepts have multiple meanings depending on the
    contexts in which they are used. For example,
    HMO can refer to (a) a clinical setting (b)
    insurer (c) institutionalized relationship
    between payers, insurers, and providers. Semantic
    tangles of this sort will undoubtedly continue
    pending adoption of a more refined nomenclature.
    Meanwhile, a high level of contextual awareness
    is obviously in order.

27
INDEPENDENT PRACTICE ASSOCIATION (IPA)
  • Employer hires an HMO (insurer), which in turn
    pays an IPA a per patient
  • fee (capitation). The IPA then contracts with
    primary care M.D.s
  • on a capitated basis, while paying specialists on
    a discounted FFS
  • basis. IPAs also often pay bonuses to those
    providers who meet
  • quality and output standards. Participating
    physicians remain
  • independent and may retain private practices
    and contract
  • w/ other HMOs.

SPECIALISTS
X
X
X
CAPITATION
FFS
INS. CONTRACT
FIXED FEE
EMPLOYER
HMO
IPA
PURCHASER
IPAs are the fastest growing type of HMOs by
1996 they already had 26m members, and continue
to grow rapidly. They are popular w/ physicians
because they allow them to contract w/ several
HMO simultaneously and to maintain their private
practices.
PRIMARY CARE
28
PREFERRED PROVIDER ORGANIZATION (PPO)
  • Employer hires PPO (insurer), which in turn pays
    all contracted providers on a discounted
    fee-for-service basis. In return providers
    benefit from increased patient volume. While some
    PPOs have HMO-style gatekeepers, most allow
    patients to directly consult specialists.
    Patients can also go outside the PPO network, but
    must absorb a higher co-pay for doing so. This
    is a particularly popular PPO feature, and has
    been emulated by so-called HMO point-of-service
    (POS) plans. PPOs use utilization reviews and
    other practices
  • designed to assure quality and limit cost.

SPECIALISTS
DISCOUNTED FFS
X
X
INS. CONTRACT
DISCOUNTED FFS
PPO
EMPLOYER
PURCHASER
PPOs now enroll around 90m people they tripled
their enrollments between 1990 and 1996. PPOs
also are popular with employers and with
physicians, for whom increased patient traffic
usually compensates for discounted fees.
PRIMARY CARE
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