What a Waste: Why We Can’t Rein In Extra Health Spending

What a Waste: Why We Can’t Rein In Extra Health Spending

Don Berwick took a parting shot at the waste in the U.S. health system as he stepped down at CMS, reinvigorating a question as old as Medicare: Why isn't our system more efficient?

Depending on whom you ask, waste in the U.S. health care system is either a problem — or a big problem.

The National Health Care Antifraud Association says outright abuse represents 3% of all health care spending. PricewaterhouseCoopers casts a broader net; the firm suggests that more than 50% of total health spending is driven by inefficiencies like overtesting, medical errors and even Americans’ bad behaviors.

But health care stakeholders of all stripes agree on two counts.

1) Our health system is wasteful. 2) We must do more to rein it in.

If only it was that easy.

What’s Been Done

Despite decades of health officials calling for change, inefficiency seems as rampant as ever. Maybe more so.

Joseph Califano, overseeing a decade-old Medicaid program, warned Congress in 1977 that 7% of the program’s costs went toward fraud, overpayments and bureaucratic errors. Don Berwick, departing a mature Medicare program, told the New York Times last week that 20% to 30% of all spending was waste.

Of course, trying to build a perfectly efficient health system may be like chasing a rainbow — you can drive toward it forever, but never quite get there.

But shouldn’t the staggering panoply of efforts to reduce waste have accomplished more by now? A limited sample includes:

Yet despite the extra attention, Medicare still represented about 40% of the government’s wasteful spending in fiscal year 2010, topping a list of 70 federal programs, according to GAO. Altogether CMS made more than $70 billion in “improper payments.”

A Culture That Rewards Waste?

What’s improper may depend on your vantage point, though. Like art and beauty, waste is in the eye of the beholder.

In 1995 testimony, a senior Congressional Budget Office official stressed to Congress that there’s a “spectrum” for health services, from clearly fraudulent care to the absolutely needed, fairly priced procedures. But there’s “ample room” between those poles, the official added, and that’s where many medical services that Medicare pays for fall.

And one economist’s unnecessary CT scan is another patient’s sought-after test — or a care provider’s income.

“There is a politically powerful constituency for waste” in the United States, Princeton University economist Uwe Reinhardt told California Healthline. “They don’t march down K Street in D.C. with signs [saying,] ‘We want waste,’ but in effect they lobby for it all the time on the Hill.”

What Other Nations Don’t Do — and What We Do

Reinhardt cited the Business Roundtable’s value index, which suggests that the U.S. has a health care “value gap” of 23% compared with nations like Germany and the United Kingdom; according to the Roundtable, five key peer nations spend $0.63 for every $1 the U.S. spends on health care.

Some of this may reflect our system’s inherent bureaucracy — the added dollars spent on billers and coders, for example. Alternately, the U.S. system may be inflated by higher prices, its sheer size and entrenched interests.

Whatever the reason, systemic waste helps put the U.S. at “a significant global competitive disadvantage,” the Roundtable concludes. The added spending prevents companies from investing in necessary products and equipment; it also doesn’t improve the health of the workforce, which would boost productivity.

Meanwhile, why do other nations seemingly do better at tamping down fraud and abuse?

“Why do Canadian hospitals not have huge compliance departments, as ours have?” Reinhardt asked.

Perhaps “there is greater inbred larceny in our system because Americans do not view health care as a community service, but a business in which everyone — for profit or not — is in for himself,” he concluded.

To avoid wasting words, we’ll wrap “Road to Reform” for this week. Here’s what else is happening around the nation.

Challenges to Reform

Inside the Industry

In the States

On the Hill

Public Opinion

Rolling Out Reform

Studying the Effects of Reform

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