The Delaware Gazette

Unusual respite from surging health care costs

RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON — Amer­i­cans kept health care spend­ing in check for three years in a row, the gov­ern­ment reported Mon­day, an unusual respite that could linger if the econ­omy stays soft or fade like a mirage if job growth comes roar­ing back.

The nation’s health care tab stood at $2.7 tril­lion in 2011, the lat­est year avail­able, said non­par­ti­san num­ber crunch­ers with the Depart­ment of Health and Human Ser­vices. That’s 17.9 per­cent of the econ­omy, which aver­ages out to $8,680 for every man, woman and child, far more than any other eco­nom­i­cally advanced coun­try spends.

Still, it was the third straight year of his­tor­i­cally low increases in the United States. The 3.9 per­cent increase meant that health care costs grew in line with the over­all econ­omy in 2011 instead of surg­ing ahead as they nor­mally have dur­ing a recov­ery. A health care bill that grows at about the same rate as the econ­omy is afford­able; one that surges ahead is not.

The respite means Pres­i­dent Barack Obama and law­mak­ers in Con­gress have a win­dow to ease in tighter cost con­trols this year, if they can man­age to reach a broader agree­ment on taxes and spend­ing. Health care spend­ing is pro­jected to spike up again in 2014, as Obama’s law cov­er­ing the unin­sured takes full effect, before set­tling down to a new normal.

“Eco­nomic, income and job growth in 2011 was mod­est and less than might nor­mally be expected dur­ing an eco­nomic recov­ery,” said the report from the government’s National Health Expen­di­ture Accounts Team. “This fact raises ques­tions about whether the near future will hold the type of rebound in health care spend­ing typ­i­cally seen a few years after a downturn.”

The report noted sig­nals in both directions.

Medicare spend­ing grew faster in 2011, but Med­ic­aid spend­ing slowed down. Spend­ing on hos­pi­tal care slowed.

Spend­ing on pre­scrip­tion drugs and doc­tors’ ser­vices accel­er­ated, but spend­ing for pri­vate health insur­ance grew modestly.

More peo­ple gained health insur­ance as a result of the health law’s require­ment that young adults can stay on a parent’s plan until age 26. But employ­ers increas­ingly steered work­ers and fam­i­lies into high-deductible health plans, which come with lower monthly pre­mi­ums but require patients to pay a greater share of their bills out of their own pock­ets. That’s a dis­in­cen­tive to go to the doctor.

Although some insur­ers are cur­rently seek­ing big pre­mium increases for cer­tain plans, it’s not clear that’s a wide­spread trend.

The slow­down in health care spend­ing has been widely debated. Some experts see it as an echo-chamber effect of a weak econ­omy. Oth­ers say cost con­trols by gov­ern­ment and employ­ers are start­ing to have an effect. Many believe costs need to be squeezed more.

“I think it’s a big open­ing,” said Ken Thorpe, a pro­fes­sor of health pol­icy at Emory Uni­ver­sity in Atlanta, who served in the Clin­ton admin­is­tra­tion as a senior adviser. “If we have a debate on enti­tle­ment reform this year, we need to come up with ideas for pulling costs out of the system.”

Cut­ting pay­ments to hos­pi­tals and doc­tors won’t solve the prob­lem, said Thorpe. The chal­lenge is to slow the spread of chronic ill­nesses such as dia­betes while also find­ing ways to keep patients health­ier and out of the hospital.

The num­bers back up Thorpe’s obser­va­tion. Health care spend­ing is highly skewed toward the sick­est peo­ple. Five per­cent of patients account for nearly half the total spend­ing in any given year.

The report was pub­lished in the jour­nal Health Affairs.

AP News Posted by on Jan 7 2013. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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