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Restructure Medicare & Medicaid: Economic Factors—
Unconstrained Access to Medical Technology Increases Cost of Care...
e Researchers generally agree that advances in medical technology
have contributed to rising US Health Spending!
e Medical technology affects the costs of care through several
“mechanisms of action”?
— New treatments for previously untreatable terminal conditions
— Major advances in clinical ability to treat previously untreatable acute conditions
— New procedures for discovering and treating secondary diseases
— New indications for a treatment over time
— Ongoing, incremental improvements in existing capabilities
— Major advances or the cumulative effect of incremental gains extending clinical
practice to conditions once regarded beyond its boundaries
e Very expensive, high-end medical procedures (such as dialysis and heart
bypass) — which can easily cost as much as the average annual income of
an American — are increasingly 60-70% subsidized by taxpayer dollars.
Source: 1) “How Changes in Medical Technology Affect Healthcare Costs,” Kaiser Family Foundation, March 2007; 2) Richard A.
Retting, “Medical Innovation Duels Cost Containment,” Health Affairs (Summer 1994).
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Opportunity for Two Mutually Reinforcing Cycles:
Information + Incentives...
e More widespread adoption of healthcare information technology, in particular
clinical decision support software, should yield better information and provider
decisions.
— Healthcare is at the cusp of leveraging decision-support technology after
historically lagging other industries.
— Opportunity to develop best practices to improve patient care and outcomes
and reduce medical errors and costs.
— More evidence-based care could help to narrow the variation in practice norms
— The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 provided approximately
$19 billion for Medicare and Medicaid Health IT incentives.
e Medpac summarizes the opportunities and issues succinctly.
— "Drivers of investment in IT include the promise of quality and efficiency gains.
Barriers include the cost and complexity of IT implementation, which often
necessitates significant work process and cultural changes. Certain
characteristics of the health care market—including payment policies that
reward volume rather than quality, and a fragmented delivery system—can also
pose barriers to IT adoption."
Source: Morgan Stanley Healthcare Research.
KP
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HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020993
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