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Health Care Spending Slowdown Could Mean New Success In Cost Control

Healthcare Spending

RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR   01/ 9/12 09:21 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Is health-care relief finally in sight? Health spending stabilized as a share of the nation's economy in 2010 after two back-to-back years of historically low growth, the government reported Monday.

Experts debated whether it's a fleeting consequence of the sluggish economy, or a real sign that cost controls by private employers and government at all levels are starting to work.

The answers will be vital for Medicare's sustainability, as well as for workplace coverage.

U.S. health care spending grew by 3.9 percent in 2010, reaching $2.6 trillion, according to the report by the Health and Human Services department.

That's an average of $8,402 per person – far more than any other economically advanced country.

Still, the increases for 2010 and 2009 were the lowest measured in 51 years. And health care as a share of the economy leveled off at 17.9 percent, the first time in a decade there's been no growth.

The main reason for the slowdown was that Americans were more frugal in their use of health care, from postponing elective surgery to using generic drugs and thinking twice about that late-night visit to the emergency room.

"Although medical goods and services are generally viewed as necessities, the latest recession has had a dramatic effect on their utilization," said the report published in the journal Health Affairs. "Though the recession officially ended in 2009, its impact on the health care sector appears to have continued into 2010."

Independent economists issued conflicting assessments.

"I think it could signal slower growth in the future," said Ken Thorpe, professor of health policy at Emory University in Atlanta. "Any discussion about reducing the deficit is going to focus on how we reduce the growth in health-care costs. And employers are adopting more effective tools to keep putting downward pressure on health-care cost increases."

But his counterpart Len Nichols at George Mason University in Virginia said people are getting less medical care because too many have lost jobs and insurance, and they just can't afford to pay.

"The slowdown is mostly due to postponement of care, due to anticipated inability to pay," said Nichols. If he's right, that could mean costs will spike once the economy is on solid footing.

The report provided relief for a jittery White House facing a 2012 reelection campaign in which President Barack Obama's health care overhaul is a top target for Republicans.

The nonpartisan number crunchers at HHS found that the health care law barely contributed to cost increases in 2010 – just one-tenth of 1 percentage point. Major provisions expanding coverage to more than 30 million uninsured don't take effect until 2014, well after the presidential election.

The federal government's share of the total health care tab – another issue in this year's political debate – grew to 29 percent in 2010, up from 23 percent as recently as 2007. Counting state and local spending, the overall government share stood at 45 percent of the total.

Medicare spending grew by 5 percent in 2010. That was slower growth than in 2009, due mainly to reductions in what the government paid private Medicare Advantage insurance plans. Medicaid spending increased by 7.2 percent, less than the 2009 rate because of fewer people covered by the program.

However, the main finding of the report was a continued slowdown in the use of services across major health-care categories, one its authors termed "dramatic." Higher copayments for those with private insurance are part of the reason.

Hospital care, which accounts for just over 30 percent of what Americans spend, grew more slowly because of a decline in a key measure of inpatient admissions, and slower growth in emergency room visits, outpatient appointments, and outpatient surgery.

Spending on doctor visits and related care – about 20 percent of the total – grew at a historically low rate of 2.5 percent, due to an overall drop in visits and a milder 2010 flu season. But spending on dental care increased faster than in 2009.

Prescription drugs, about 10 percent of overall spending, also saw a slower increase – just 1.2 percent in 2010. That was not only due to the continuing shift to generic drugs, but also slower growth in the overall volume of medications that Americans took.

Will less health care hurt consumers?

That remains to be seen, but current evidence suggests it won't. Americans are no healthier than their counterparts in other developed countries, which spend far less. And research suggests that as much as 30 percent of tests and treatments for U.S. patients may be of little or no benefit.

The HHS experts refused to speculate about the implications of the slowdown, although their report stressed the connection to a weak economy. More may be known by the summer, when another team in the same HHS unit will update projections for future health care spending.

___

Online:

HHS report in Health Affairs: http://tinyurl.com/6nyuzrr

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WASHINGTON — Is health-care relief finally in sight? Health spending stabilized as a share of the nation's economy in 2010 after two back-to-back years of historically low growth, the government...
WASHINGTON — Is health-care relief finally in sight? Health spending stabilized as a share of the nation's economy in 2010 after two back-to-back years of historically low growth, the government...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ForVivi
Another button, another buttonhole.
11:48 PM on 01/11/2012
Just today I talked to an elderly man who fell down in his bathroom, crawled for two hours to get to his phone, called EMS and refused to be transported to the hospital to avoid the high cost of the ambulance.
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George Costanza
My micro-bio is apparently unpublishable
12:22 PM on 01/11/2012
That's right, y'all. Obama promised that the ACA would bend the cost curve, such that cost wouldn't increase as precipitously as they historically have, and now we have evidence that healthcare spending, indeed, as not increased as precipitously as it has in the past.

But no one here, in the article or the comments, is suggesting that the ACA has actually done what Obama said it would do. It's all something else. It is people staying away from the doctor and not filling prescriptions. It's the loss of benefits due to unemployment. Anything except the actual, even marginal success of a government program.

Because in America, the government can't succeed. It has been drilled into us for 30 years. In America, "Government is the problem."

But the fact is, government programs work all the time. In the last depression, the interstate highway system was built as a government program, and it was an essential component of economic growth in the decades that followed. Social Secuity and Medicare a exclusively responsible for the fact that a large segment of the elderly are not starving and homeless in this generational recession, the way they were in the last one. The FDIC and other government insurances kept the hoards from making a run on the banks during the initial shock wave of the financial crisis, saving untold numbers of banks from closing their doors.

Don't be so quick to discount the value of government programs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Don Glenn
Tree Hugging Liberal With Guns
05:16 PM on 01/11/2012
Thanks for the post. I have always fought that battle. Our gov is a work in progress, adjust, adapt and overcome. Not tear down and start over as the right likes to preach.
05:55 PM on 01/11/2012
100 & with you
04:00 PM on 01/10/2012
I do not see the costs going down and this is a dream. When does your auto insurance go down?
Insurance is like banking. False shortages are created to make costs go up.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lesperado
glad I wasn't born conservative
11:31 AM on 01/11/2012
My auto insurance went down this year.
11:44 AM on 01/11/2012
Glad yours did.. Mine sky-rocketed.. but I added a teenaged son to it.. YIKES!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anne Rutherford
03:22 PM on 01/10/2012
As the deductibles climbed, more people are postponing treatment - not always a good thing. The system itself is broken in many ways. Health insurance useage often establishes an adversarial reltiaonship between the carrier and patients by paying providers slowly, contesting claims, having too few providers for speicalized services, and by encouraging employers to raise dedictibles in order to keep somewhat comprehensive coverage for employees. First, there is no reason to have insurance tied to employment - happened because of wage freezes in World War II - insurance was offered as an incentive to retain employees in a tight labor market. The result of 60 years of employer-based insurance? Job lock, lack of choice in policy, curtailed entrepreneurship and a slowing of small business growth (many can't afford to work for a company that offers no insurance) - and this is the sector where jobs are created. The system is collapsing in on itself, inch by inch.
02:21 PM on 01/10/2012
Don't worry. If it is it's temporary and Plan Obama will come to the rescue. Moreover price cuts will mean less employment so you can happily blame more unemployment on that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Don Glenn
Tree Hugging Liberal With Guns
05:18 PM on 01/11/2012
How about wage stagnation because your employer pays a bigger and bigger share of your income to cover its employees. That couldn't be a factor could it.
05:56 PM on 01/11/2012
My premium costs go up 20% per year. Year over year. My employer has been crystal clear that its portion of health care costs are holding steady. Otherwise we'd be left with no benefits at all.
rdk70816
Yellowhammer
01:44 PM on 01/10/2012
Maybe the lower health costs are indicative of fewer Hispanics crossing the border to get health care and education. Or maybe physicians are deciding that their unparalleled reach for an elite life style has been achieved or reached some limit.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lesperado
glad I wasn't born conservative
11:32 AM on 01/11/2012
Oh brother....
rdk70816
Yellowhammer
11:52 AM on 01/11/2012
Yes?
iam99
To know what you prefer...
12:03 PM on 01/10/2012
In order to better determine the health of the nation the consistent, timely reporting of suicides and deaths by exposure must be reported. This is information that researchers need to know.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeanette DeBella Bogue
pretty sure I'm going straight to hell....
11:34 AM on 01/10/2012
Have they removed the Anti Trust Exemption from health insurers? No? Then, no it hasn't.
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MSROADKILL612
am not convinced geothermal energy is above ground
11:14 AM on 01/10/2012
ballooning health care costs means breast implants right? :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AlonzoQuijana
Independent, Libertarian, Skeptic
10:24 AM on 01/10/2012
Sadly, PPACA (Obamacare) is the current system on steroids. We should have gone with the Wyden (a Democrat) plan which would have completely divorced health insurance from the workplace. It would have created a giant and efficient and -- for you liberals, regulated -- market for individual plans.

PPACA? We'll still have ERISA, state regulated plans, individual plans, small business plans, Medicare, Medicaid, government-run direct delivery (VA, public hospitals) with all manner of intermediaries: HMOs, insurance companies, the feds, employers, benefits management companies, who knows who else?
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BBackSoon
Hello, I must be going.
12:06 PM on 01/10/2012
I agree, but the Right was never going to back anything like that. Obama should have pushed for a National Health Care plan that provided a minimum level of coverage for everyone. And then allow people to buy supplemental insurance as they saw fit. But he was still thinking that there were Reasonable Republicans on the other side.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Don Glenn
Tree Hugging Liberal With Guns
05:20 PM on 01/11/2012
Great Point F+F
10:23 AM on 01/10/2012
The new regulations by the EPA on mercury emissions will help cut health care costs. In fact, we could save up to $ 1 trillion, by some estimates. (See recent articles on the Huffington Post.)

However, the GOP wants to eliminate the EPA. That will mean more asthma, bronchitis and other respiratory diseases. Without Obama-care, any one with asthma cannot get health insurance, so when these people get sick, they wind up in the emergency ward. Talk to any one teaches or has taught in an inner city school (including yours truly), and they'll tell you that the next generation could be called the asthma generation. If we don't clean up our air, what does this bode?

So it's good news that health care costs are going down, but if you let the GOP take over, you can health care costs to sky-rocket.
10:18 AM on 01/10/2012
Healthcare will eventually face the same econmic reality the rest of us faced. they keep raiseing our deductable while while raiseing our rates. We need a manage healthcare now
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Don Glenn
Tree Hugging Liberal With Guns
05:21 PM on 01/11/2012
Yep! Thats the way I see it.
10:15 AM on 01/10/2012
Our deductable goes up and our rates goe up,. We spend almost as much on healthcare as we do our mortage
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AlonzoQuijana
Independent, Libertarian, Skeptic
10:28 AM on 01/10/2012
Same here! ANd the complexity is overwhelming. Our plan goes to about 50 pages -- co-pays, deductibles, in-network, out-of-network, four tiers of drugs, each with its own reimbursement rates, HSAs, even penalties -- e.g. buying a name-brand drug at Walgreen's instead of CVS. Get rid of the complexity and we'd probably eliminate a lot of the costs.
03:37 PM on 01/10/2012
I am ready for a single payer Canadian style plan.
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BBackSoon
Hello, I must be going.
12:07 PM on 01/10/2012
And it gets to the point that you only go when you are really sick.

Why have insurance if you can't afford to use it?
10:10 AM on 01/10/2012
What are the doctors reporting? If they start to complain they can't afford a new Porsche every year, then we'll know this is working.
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BBackSoon
Hello, I must be going.
12:10 PM on 01/10/2012
Not all doctors make the big bucks. They are faced with massive Malpractice insurance premiums an a shiteload of paperwork just to get paid for what they do. And they are paid for doing things, this is the reason for all the tests and the scripts.

Look up a documentary called Money Driven Medicine. It will astound you.
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bbrown37
Wherever you go, there you are
12:57 PM on 01/10/2012
Doctors (outside of certain specialists) don't make anymore money than they deserve. Covering their own liability and that of their employees costs more than most people imagine.

In fact, being a general-practice doctor is so unrewarding financially that most aspiring physicians pursue specialties that warrant higher pay. There's a serious lack of family-practice doctors in the U.S.

Being a doctor has traditionally been a rewarding profession because it should be. They provide an invaluable service and have education standards second to none. They're held highly accountable in the U.S. today via malpractice lawsuits and regulations.

Don't be another one of those tools that blames useful professions for your problems. Why not look at the corporate model that even non-profit hospitals are run under? The same people who run everything else run hospitals (not doctors), and all they're good at is making money. Making money means "Making your money into Their money".
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QtheHero
The meaning of life is that there is no meaning
09:45 AM on 01/10/2012
No, there is no relief in sight for the health care industry. Stop teasing us with articles like this.