This week I'm posting a podcast I did for GeriPal about my forthcoming book, "Old and Sick in America: the Journey through the Health Care System."
LIFE IN THE END ZONE: A discussion of topical issues for anyone concerned with the final phase of life by Muriel R. Gillick, MD
March 31, 2017
March 27, 2017
Double, Double, They're In Trouble
The headlines on Tuesday, March 14 focused on two items: the
blizzard that was belting the Northeast and the CBO report which predicted that
24 million Americans would lose health insurance coverage over the next 10
years if Trump Care became law. Far less prominently featured was the Senate
confirmation of Seema Verma as head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS). Approved by a 55-33 vote, Verma could potentially have a major
effect on the shape of health care for older Americans. So what do we know
about Ms Verma?
We know she’s a first generation American and that she has a BA
from the University of Maryland and an MPH from Johns Hopkins. She was the
president and founder of SVC (which presumably stands for Seema Verma
Consulting rather than superior vena cava, though I can’t find any reference on
the website to what the letters stand for), an Indianapolis-based company that
says it provides “strategic health policy solutions.” Her main claim to fame is
that she (or SCV, Inc) came up with a strategy that enabled the Indiana
Medicaid program to charge residents for premiums. She is widely expected to
promote a similar strategy at the federal level as head of CMS. Medicaid is
generally thought of as a program for the poor; how would Medicaid reform
affect older individuals?
As of 2011, there are 10 million people who receive both Medicare and Medicaid, of whom 61 percent, or 6.1 million, are 65 or older. The remainder are younger people with
disabilities. Just who are these people? The short answer is that they are the
sickest, most impaired, and most vulnerable members of society. Nearly 3 in 4
have at least 3 chronic conditions. Over 60 percent need help with basic
self-care activities such as eating, bathing, or dressing. And nearly 60
percent have a cognitive or mental impairment such as dementia.
And what does Medicaid provide for these “dually eligible”
patients? Medicaid pays for nursing home care. It pays for long term care in
the community. And it makes Medicare more affordable by helping cover Medicare
premiums. The biggest chunk goes to long term care, with Medicaid allocating 62
percent of the $147 billion it spent in 2011 to long term care.
The amount that Medicaid pays for these services is considerable.
Medicare beneficiaries account for 15 percent of Medicaid enrollment but 36
percent of Medicaid spending. Many states devote a considerable amount of their
Medicaid spending to dually eligible, and 6 states spend over 45 percent of
their Medicaid budget on the dually eligible.
What all this means is that Seema Verma could introduce policies
that have widespread repercussions for 10 million people, over 6 million of
them seniors. Within hours after being sworn in, she and DHHS Secretary Tom
Price sent a letter to state governors urging them to impose premiums for the
poor, charge Medicaid recipients for use of emergency rooms, and require many
of those on Medicaid to get jobs.
Reforming Medicaid, Republican style, would take the form of block grants. This means that the federal government would dole out a fixed amount of
money to the states and allow them to set their own eligibility criteria. But
it also means that there would be a cap on what each state gets, regardless of
growth in the vulnerable population or their needs.
States then have a choice: they can raise the eligibility
standards, they can cut back on benefits, or they can reduce payments to
providers. For people living in nursing homes, the single largest group of
older individuals receiving Medicaid, how would that translate into practice?
Well, the state could decide that only people with deficiencies in 5 activities
of daily living (rather than 3 or 4) will be admitted to nursing homes under
their Medicaid benefit, keeping more people at home longer without providing
the necessary support to make this safe. Or it could limit the number of months
it will cover nursing home care, forcing the burden of care onto families that
in many cases have already concluded they cannot bear that burden. Or it could
cut back the already bare bones payments to nursing home facilities,
jeopardizing the quality of care in those institutions.
Medicaid matters. Write to Ms. Verma. Let her know.
March 20, 2017
What We Pay
The Princeton health
economist, Uwe Reinhardt, first said it in 2004. The private think tank, the
McKinsey Global Institute, persuasively demonstrated it was true in 2008. But
maybe now that the Wall Street Journal is saying the same thing, policy makers
will listen. The elephant in the room, the main factor accounting for the high
cost of health care in the US, is prices.
The spending gap between the
US and other developed countries remains huge. We spend 17 percent of GDP on
health care (that’s all spending, public and private combined); our closest
competitor, Switzerland, manages to spend 11 percent. Other OECD countries,
such as New Zealand and Norway, spend closer to 9 percent. And despite all the
excess spending, we don’t have better outcomes across a broad range of
measures, from infant mortality to life-expectancy.
The main culprit, the WSJ
reports, is higher prices in the US. The average price of most prescription
drugs is higher here—by a lot. Avastin (an expensive medication but not the
most expensive medication there is) costs $4000 for a 400 mg vial in America and less than $2000
in western Europe. Ditto for procedures: the cost of coronary artery bypass
surgery in the US is $80,000, compared to half that in other OECD countries.
And so on, down the line. Elsewhere in
the world, the WSJ explains, state run health systems set limits on prices or
refuse to pay a supplier if the cost is regarded as excessive. Our free market
system, far from keeping costs down, drives them up.
The McKinsey Report, though a
few years old now, makes further adjustments based on a country’s wealth. It
argues that richer countries may want to spend a larger proportion of their
income on health care. But even adjusting for greater GDP per capita, the US
spent $650 billion more than “expected” in 2006. The fastest growing part of
the excess, the study showed, was due to outpatient care, both office visits
and ambulatory surgery. And what was driving up costs in these domains wasn’t
the frequency of visits—Europeans tend to go to the doctor at least as often as
their American counterparts—it was the cost per visit. Other major contributors
to the high cost of American health care are drug pricing (McKinsey found, as
did the WSJ, that we pay more in the US for a given drug than we would in other
OECD countries) and the cost of health administration (all the spending on
marketing and administration of multiple private health plans boosts costs way
over what they would be with a single payer).
I think it’s fair to conclude
that the high cost of American medicine isn’t solely—or even mainly—due to waste.
Targeting the use of less-than-optimal therapies in outpatient practice, as the
Choosing Wisely campaign does won’t solve the cost problem. Nor will targeting
expensive, burdensome, and unwanted treatment near the end of life. These are
important efforts to improve quality of
care. But if we want to do something about cost, we need to have an impact
on prices. That means cutting payments made by insurers (both Medicare and
private insurance companies) to pricey specialists. It means allowing the
biggest and most influential insurer of all, Medicare, to negotiate with drug
companies about price. It means allowing insurers such as Medicare to pay for
devices based on their cost-effectiveness, not based on what the manufacturer
charges.
Introducing single payer health insurance would help, too. It
happens to be the only other way to cover all Americans and make health
insurance affordable and get rid of pre-existing conditions riders without use
of the “mandate” that Republicans find so very unpalatable. But that’s a topic
for another day.
March 13, 2017
You Don't Get What You Pay For
The enormous interest in
getting good “value” for every dollar spent on health care, whether by
individuals, insurers, government, or anyone else neglects certain basic
realities—for example, that medical care isn’t a consumer good like toasters:
it’s a very sophisticated service provided by highly trained
professionals; and that health insurance
by its very nature makes the operation of a free market impossible. There’s
still another basic reality that is even more often neglected, and that is the
widespread belief that “you get what you pay for.” Or, if you pay less for one
treatment than another, the cheaper one is necessarily inferior. Any claims
that the two are of equal quality are suspect. And claims that the cheaper one
is higher quality are, on their face, deemed outlandish.
Translated into practice,
this means that patients and doctors alike tend to assume that more is better.
More x-rays (or, as plain radiographs, CT scans, MRIs, and PET scans are
collectively known, “imaging studies”), more medications, more doctors is superior care and must result in better outcomes. As a
result, I’m not at all surprised that changing physician behavior and patient
expectations has proved difficult, even when professional guidelines assert
that less is more. And unfortunately (unfortunate since, from a geriatric
perspective, less often is more), a
new study that purports to show that greater spending per hospitalized patient
fails to improve outcomes is hardly convincing.
Previous retrospective
studies, especially those comprising the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, have shown that expenditures
on apparently similar patients differ by geographic region, by hospital, and
within regions—without any measurable difference in outcomes. But the Dartmouth
Atlas has been criticized for working backwards from death even though death
could not have been predicted in advance, it has been criticized for failing to
adequately consider differences between the patient population in different locales,
and it has been critiqued for not acknowledging that patient preference might
account for some of the observed differences in health care utilization and, as
a result, in cost. The new study asks whether physicians working in the same hospital nonetheless exhibit
differences in their pattern of test- and treatment-ordering and whether that
variation results in different outcomes for their patients. Looking at over 1.3
million hospitalizations occurring at over 3000 hospitals and involving 72,000 physicians,
they found large variability in expenditures and no difference in outcomes—just
like the Dartmouth Atlas findings.
The authors were careful to
look at Medicare Part B spending because this is involves services that are at
the discretion of physicians (Part A spending is determined largely by the DRG,
the reason for admission, and is set by Medicare) and is a “proxy” for the
intensity of resource use by physicians. They were careful to confine their
analysis to Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries who were age 65 or older and
hospitalized for an acute medical condition. And they examined separately the
behavior of general internists and hospitalists. They made some adjustments to
account for differences among patients, including age (in 5-year increments),
sex, race/ethnicity, median income, and existing comorbidities, and other
adjustments to account for differences among physicians, including age (also in
5-year increments), sex, and site of medical school education. They found that
the variation in spending across physicians within a hospital was greater than
across hospitals. Among hospitalists, adjusted spending was more than 40
percent higher among doctors in the highest spending quartile compared with the
lowest quartile. And higher expenditures had no effect on either the 30-day
readmission rate or mortality, the two measures of quality used to examine
outcomes.
Regrettably, this study has a
number of glaring weaknesses. First, there are the odd omissions: the authors
report on the gap between the highest and lowest quartiles of hospitalists but
not the corresponding figure for general internists, even though nearly twice
as many patients were cared for by internists than by hospitalists. Next, it’s
not clear that the two outcomes examined—mortality and readmission rate—are
good indicators of quality. Or rather, even if the two groups were
indistinguishable based on these two measures, perhaps one group fared far
better than the other on some other measure that wasn’t looked at, say quality
of life. Finally, the study wasn’t randomized and it wasn’t prospective,
allowing for the possibility that there were important differences between the
patients on whom much money was spent and those on whom less was spent. In
fact, maybe the patients on whom more resources were expended were sicker. If
they were sicker but had the same mortality rate and readmission rate as those
on whom fewer resources were spent, then arguably they fared better than their
counterparts!
So where do we go from here?
Contrary to the prevailing wisdom, the answer may not lie with “big data.” Too
many things are going on at once with these patients to be able to reliably
conclude that ceteris paribus, all things being equal, overall expenditure on
tests and treatments had no bearing on outcomes. I think it would make sense to
look at a small number of detailed case examples—20 or 30 patients of the same
age with the same admitting diagnosis, matched for severity of illness,
co-morbidities, race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic class, some of whom are
cared for by prolific test-orderers and some of whom are not—following them
prospectively over time to see what happens to them. And the study would try to
ascertain why various choices were made, perhaps by interviewing the patients
and/or their doctors, perhaps by gleaning the answer from free text in medical
records, and what their outcomes turned out to be.
March 06, 2017
A Piece of My Mind
Prescription
medications cost more in the US than anywhere else in the world and costs have been skyrocketing each year for the past several years. To a growing extent,
the burden of the high cost falls directly on consumers, either because their
health plan has a tiered system for medications (charging ever larger co-pays for some drugs), because their health plan pays only a percentage of
the charge for various drugs (and if the consumer has to pay 20 percent and
it’s 20 percent of a very large number, that’s a major outlay), or because they
have a high-deductible health plan and the insurer doesn’t pay anything until
they have spent $3000—or $5000 or $10,000—on health care.
By and
large, pharmaceutical companies have been blamed for the high cost of
medicines, with insurers shouldering some of the blame, thanks to complicated and ungenerous policies. Pharma has tried to justify its
sometimes astronomical charges as necessary to support its research efforts, with
the most recent industry-endorsed estimate for the cost of developing a new drug and bringing it to market now topping $2.6 billion. Other analyses attack the methodology used in this report to measure costs, arguing that it
fails to take into account, for example, that NIH funds much of the research
that goes into discovering a new drug, not the pharmaceutical industry. The result is a dramatic over-estimate of the cost borne by industry. Concerns
about the role of drug companies and to some extent health insurers are
entirely legitimate. But there has been little attention paid to the role of
drug stores in contributing to the high cost of medicines.
I did a
little bit of investigating today. I looked at what two commonly used medications would
cost a family like mine who had exceeded the $4000 deductible for their health plan, what
they cost today (given that it’s only early March and most people haven’t
had the opportunity to spend $4000 on medical care this year), and what they
would cost if they were obtained from a Canadian mail-order pharmacy. Here’s what I
found for one of the medicines, the widely used nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
drug, Celecoxib.
Celecoxib
is used as a treatment for arthritis in people with certain gastrointestinal
conditions because it's a little less prone to exacerbate these problems than other anti-inflammatory drugs. It is available generically. The
non-profit insurance company Harvard Pilgrim Health Care classifies generic
Celecoxib as a “tier 1” drug. That means that the cost of a 3-month mail order supply
of the medication (100 mg taken once a day) from Walgreen’s, the pharmacy with
which Harvard Pilgrim has a contract, would be $10. But until the deductible is met, Harvard Pilgrim doesn’t pay for medications, so the cost would be a
whopping $156.51 for 90 pills (which, incidentally, isn’t even quite a 3-month
supply since last I looked, a year has 365 days, not 360 days). So I contacted a pharmacy in
Canada, identifying one that is approved by CIPA, the Canadian association of
licensed retailed pharmacies. I found a
drug store that will supply 120 pills for $25.99 (plus a small shipping
charge). That comes out to $1.74 per pill at Walgreen’s compared to 22¢ at the
Canadian competitor. Walgreen’s costs eight times as much as the Canadian
pharmacy. And the medication isn’t manufactured in some shady country with
questionable oversight. It’s made in the UK.
How can
this be? Is Celecoxib a fluke? So I looked at another commonly prescribed medication, this time a drug classified as tier 3. I chose Vagifem, an estrogen suppository, used to treat post-menopausal atrophic vaginitis. The cost of a 3-month supply through the health plan—after using the entire $4000 deductible? $80. The mail order cost from
Walgreen’s today, assuming the deductible hasn't been spent? $360. The cost from the
Canadian pharmacy? $55. Made in the UK. Walgreen’s is 7 times more expensive.
What’s
going on here? I’ll leave that to the policy wonks, but maybe they should look
at the behavior of pharmacies as well as drug companies and health insurers. After all, this isn't just a case of generic drugs costing almost as much as their brand name equivalents, which is still another problem for consumers. Meanwhile,
importing drugs from Canada is a valuable option. It's not legal to re-import medication for sale or to import restricted drugs such as opioids, but the law on medicines for personal use is a bit fuzzy, or at least its enforcement is. With consumers shouldering an ever increasing proportion of health care costs, and no prospect for relief in sight, there's a strong incentive to look north.