Google – AFP, Kerry Sheridan (AFP), 12 November 2013
Dental work
is performed as part of a free health care service at the Care Harbor
clinic on
September 27, 2012 in Los Angeles, California (Getty Images/AFP/File,
Kevork
Djansezian)
|
Washington
— Secret pricing is making healthcare in the United States more expensive than
ever, leading costs to triple in the past two decades, experts said Tuesday.
Overall, US
healthcare costs now account for nearly 18 percent of gross domestic product
(GDP), twice the amount spent by Japan, Ireland and Sweden where people are
generally healthier and live longer.
Ninety-one
percent of US healthcare cost increases since 2000 have been due to the price
of doctor visits, drugs, devices and administrative costs, said the report in
the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The
findings contradict the widely held belief that an aging population and higher
demand for medical treatment are causing health spending to rise, said study
author Hamilton Moses.
Moreover,
many of these costs are unknown to the public and even doctors themselves until
after the services have already been rendered, said Moses, an adjunct professor
of neurology and former chief physician of The Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Often,
prices are "completely invisible to you and to your doctors," he
said, noting that most are set by the federal government or negotiated confidentially
with hospitals.
"This
is not a market. It is far from a market," said Moses. "Few prices
are known. They are not well-publicized."
Therefore,
he added there is no way to say whether healthcare is overpriced.
"The
only way to say that something is overpriced is to measure that against a cost
standard or a market standard. Something is overpriced if people are not
willing to pay for it. We know neither."
Other key
drivers of the rise in costs are administrative fees incurred when doctors and
hospitals seek payment from insurers and individuals. These fees are rising by
six percent a year, the research found.
A better
way would be to use reference pricing, a system that sets a level of
reimbursement for a group of interchangeable medicines, he said.
Reference
pricing is used in many European countries, including France, Denmark, Finland,
Germany and Italy.
If the
United States were to adopt this strategy, it is "likely to be quite
effective, having been effective in other countries," said Moses.
The study
showed that US healthcare expenditures were $2.7 trillion in 2011. Health's
proportion of GDP doubled between 1980 and 2011 to 17.9 percent.
Chronic
illnesses made up 84 percent of costs overall, and again, contrary to widely
held belief, they were not only chiefly among the elderly.
In fact,
researchers found that 67 percent of health spendings was on chronic illnesses
in people under 65.
"These
10 percent of patients use two-thirds of the dollars," said Ezekiel
Emanuel of the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine.
"What
is key to cost control in healthcare is transformation of how we deliver care,
especially to the chronically ill," which includes people with congestive
heart failure, coronary artery disease, diabetes, asthma, arthritis and cancer,
he said.
Shifting
from the fee-for-service system to creating incentives for keeping people
healthy through home care and services are some possibilities for the future,
experts told reporters.
The health
care reform law spearheaded by President Barack Obama aims to insure more
Americans while containing health care costs, but Moses said the true effects
of that plan will not be known for a decade or more.
"The
problem for the health system -- and having run a hospital for awhile I am very
mindful of this -- is the economic incentives are so embedded in units of
work," he said.
"A
single operation, a single test, single encounter, a single radiographic
procedure," he added.
"Unless
those incentives are fundamentally changed to a much greater degree than is
currently envisioned, I am somewhat pessimistic."
Ezekiel
however said he sees potential for Obamacare to lower prices by opening health
insurance markets, known as exchanges, to the public.
"The
exchanges are putting downward price pressure on insurance companies," he
said, since consumers will choose the lowest insurance premiums and cheapest
out-of-pocket costs.
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goldenageofgaia.com, Steve Beckow, An Hour with an Angel, September 30, 2013, with Archangel Michael
"... SB: Oh! Very good! Okay. I think I recall you mentioning Medicare in Canada. Canada has a wonderful system of universal medicare. When will the United States enjoy the same quality of medicare? Or other nations, for that matter.
AAM: You see, this is one of the fundamental rights, and your United Nations has just begun to peek at this. All of your — yes, all — of your medical systems have been based on false grids that you are eligible for disease. Many, many industries have grown up around this belief system.
Now, we would not dismantle this in a day, because the displacement would be very large, but you have already begun to see the shift to wellness, to healing centers, to alternative methods of energy healing. And with the arrival of your star brothers and sisters this will become even more so.
So not only universal medical care, but universal healthcare and the right to wellness is going to become the simple stand-alone fact over the next year to two years. Oh, and it will happen much more quickly in the United States.
SB: Oh, that’s good to hear. So many people are bankrupted by a sudden illness. And it never should be that way.
AAM: It is an atrocity that one may suffer and die because one does not have adequate money. That is absurd. ..."
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