Code Blue Why are Costs so High? Chapters 8 through 14.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
©2010 Coventry Health Care. All rights reserved. Proprietary – Do not copy, distribute or disclose without permission of Coventry Health Care. Provided.
Advertisements

1 The Experience of Private Hospitals In the Republic of Yemen Success and Problems Dr. Ali K. Abbas Yemen International Health & Education Consultants.
Tor Iversen Lecture 11: Economic incentives and the organization of private physician practice I.
Bundled Pricing Medicare’s New Payment Model
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Figure 1. Nine of 10 Health Care Opinion Leaders Think Fundamental Change Is Required to Achieve Gains in Quality and Efficiency.
Teleconference2 Non-Profits and Hospital Behavior.
Managing Resources Responsibly Chapter 3. Factors Affecting Costs of Health Care.
Code Blue Introduction to Terms Reimbursement and Managed Care Chapters One through Seven Accounting Version.
I S T HERE A S OLUTION ? C HAPTER 16 Code Blue Health Science Edition 4.
Part Two Economics of Health Care Is Health Care similar to other commodities? Craig A. Pedersen, R.Ph., Ph.D.
Countervailing Powers: The Changing Character of the Medical Profession in the U.S. James G. Anderson, Ph.D. Purdue University.
1 INS301 Chp16 Employee Benefits: Overview and Group Medical Coverage Overview of employ benefits Group medical insurance Background of health care market.
1 Managed Health Care Pricing for Provider Arrangements Presented by Vanessa Olson Seminar on Health and Managed Care October 18, 1999.
Healthcare Reform in China and Its Impact on the Pharmaceutical Industry Hengpeng Zhu Institute of Economics Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
1 Reimbursing Health Care Providers It is all about striking the right balance between economic incentives for over-treatment and under- treatment Yaseen.
Demand for Health Care Purpose of demand analysis for health care is to determine those factors that on average most effect utilization of medical services.
1 Fourth: Health Care Plans: 1. 2 The Economics of Health Care: Price rationing occurs because buyers base purchasing decisions on the relative quality.
Slides for Class 2 H ADM 545 January 17, Broad model depicting what a Health Care Organizations (HCO) must do to remain financially viable. Hire.
U.S. Healthcare Policy. Project 4: One page summary of the project including comments on the student's contributions. Describe how the project contributed.
Chapter 23 Includes Supplements 4 through 8. The Revenue Equation.
The Free Enterprise System
INSURANCE & COSTS HEALTH CARE SERVICES. MEDICAL CARE (INSURANCE) HEALTH MAINTANCE ORGANIZATION (HMO) – A TYPE OF GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN – MEDICAL.
Includes Supplements 12 through 13
Managed Care Organizations. Managed Care Continuum Use of Managed Care Techniques Less More Traditional Indemnity Health Plan Traditional with Cost Containment.
Health Care Costs. How we pay for health care: Private pay Private pay Group health insurance Group health insurance Government sponsored plans Government.
Management & Health Delivery Systems (MGMS-101) By Dr. Hoda Zaki Prof. Hospital Administration Chair Department of Health Administration &Behavioral Sciences.
 C HAPTERS 14 & 15 Code Blue Health Science Edition 4.
Chapter 2 Economic Systems and the American Economy.
A L ESSON IN H EALTH E CONOMICS C HAPTER 13 Code Blue Health Science Edition 4.
Managed Care. In the broadest terms, Kongstvedt (1997) describes managed care as a system of healthcare delivery that tries to manage the cost of healthcare,
The Swiss Health Care System Robert E. Leu University of Bern November 2008.
Chapter Seventeen The American Economy The Economic System ~~~~~ Making Business Decisions.
Seminar Unit 6 Principles and Practices of Managed Care This presentation created by and used with permission of Ilene Margolin MRT Behavior Health Reform.
1.02 ~ ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES AND CONDITIONS CHAPTER 2 MEASURING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY.
The Health of the Nation. Judging the Health of a Nation Quality of its doctors and medical institutions Doctors from all over the world come to the U.S.
Chapter 3 Accrual Accounting Concepts. Why is Accrual Accounting Needed? Cash received or paid Revenue earned Expense incurred.
Private Health Insurance
Slides for Class 10: Traditional Economic Model That Depicts a Firm’s Output Problems With the Traditional Model The Implications These Problems Raise.
22 CHAPTER PUBLIC SECTOR ECONOMICS: The Role of Government in the American Economy Randall Holcombe Health Care.
Health Policy Issues An Economic Perspective Copyright © 2015 Foundation of the American College of Healthcare Executives. Not for sale.
Health Insurance Plans Intro to Health Science Unit One Lesson 5 Diversified Health Occupations pages.
HEALTH INSURANCE PLANS. BACKGROUND INFO Cost is a major concern Health care is over 15% of gross national product Without insurance, the cost of an illness.
CIS 170 MART Teaching Effectively/cis170mart.com FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT HCS 440 AID Inspiring Minds/hcs440aid.com FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT.
 At the end of the lecture students should be able to –  Explain non profitable health services.  Discuss HMO.  Explain capitation plan and salary.
Health Policy Issues An Economic Perspective Copyright © 2015 Foundation of the American College of Healthcare Executives. Not for sale.
Chapter 3 Being a Health Literate Consumer 1. Being an Informed Health Consumer  Anyone who purchases or uses health products or services  Knows how.
HCS 440 AID Experience Tradition /hcs440aid.com FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT
An Economic Perspective
The Big Healthcare Issues
Healthcare and the Market
HEALTH INSURANCE PLANS
Methods of Payment for Healthcare
Managed Health Care Manar alramli
Health Insurance Key Definitions & Frequently Asked Questions
An Economic Perspective
An Economic Perspective
Chapter 7 Managed Care.
Hospitals Student lecture
Health Care in the US.
Forecasting National Health Expenditures
HEALTH INSURANCE PLANS
Methods of Payment for Healthcare
PUBLIC - PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP FOR UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE
Chapter 3 Managed Health Care.
Methods of Payment for Healthcare
Financing of Health Care
Chapter 2: Health Care Economics
Component 1: Introduction to Health Care and Public Health in the U.S.
DIFFERENT MEANINGS OF COST
Module 5 HC Economics Students.
Presentation transcript:

Code Blue Why are Costs so High? Chapters 8 through 14

Chapter Nine A Lesson in Medical Economics

Two reasons for high healthcare costs Technology –Heavy investment in facilities and equipment Duplication of resources –Too many hospital beds –Too much equipment

Price elasticity When price goes up Volume goes down Price elasticity provides an incentive for companies to control costs There is little price elasticity in healthcare

What conditions must exist for a free market? An informed consumer Who makes the decision to purchase, who Shops on the basis of quality and price, and Negotiates an arms-length purchase decision

For the most part, these conditions didn’t exist in the traditional healthcare industry. Why ?

Purchase Decision The purchase decision was made by the physician, not the patient –The patient lacked the technical background to judge the necessity and quality of many of the medical goods and services provided –The physician and not the patient selected the hospital the patient would be admitted to

Price Comparison Consumers didn’t shop on the basis of quality and price –They have difficulty judging quality –Price information is not available

Price Negotiation Patients didn’t negotiate an arms-length purchase price –Price was equated with quality –Patients are reluctant to drive a hard bargain for price with one who provides life saving services

Excess Capacity What factors mitigate against unnecessary capacity in most industries? –Increased costs, which –Increase prices, which –Hurt sales volume and therefore overall profitability –Too high a price can make on non-competitive –Price competition keeps prices down

Why didn’t these same factors prevent duplication of expensive facilities and equipment in the traditional healthcare industry? There is little price elasticity for many life- saving or health preserving healthcare goods and services. Increased capacity still leads to increased fixed expense, but the resulting increase in the price of the product to the patient does not heavily influence demand.

Managed Care Tries to Create a Market Mechanism by... Educating consumers on the necessity and quality of healthcare services.  Assume the role of the informed consumer for the patient. Review and approve the necessity and quality of healthcare products and services provided (i.e. pre- certification, peer review, utilization review).

Managed Care Tries to Create a Market Mechanism by...  Assuming the role of shopping for healthcare services including negotiating the prices with hospitals and doctors.  Providing a financial incentive for physicians and hospitals to act in the best economic and medical interests of the patient.

Chapter 10 Gaming the System

Disparate Information... Can allow physicians to increase personal income by ordering unnecessary lab and x-ray tests –Some states now prohibit physician owned laboratories

Chapter 11 Adverse Incentives

Previous attempts to control healthcare costs Regulatory attempts –Certificate of Need: Hospitals had to receive permission to built new beds, or buy expensive equipment –Rate Review: In some states hospitals had to get approval for rate increases similar to the utility industry –Regional Medical Planning: Attempted to reduce unnecessary duplication of facilities and equipment

Regulation didn’t work The healthcare industry is too complex to regulate like a utility. There was little evidence that regulatory efforts reduced costs.

New Approach Managed care which included: –Incentive reimbursement to change physician behavior –Prospective and retrospective review –Use of gatekeeper physicians to limit unnecessarily access to expensive specialists

The objective was to create a market mechanism If the patient doesn’t make the purchase decision, lets not let the physician do it without prior approval If the patient can’t judge quality, have the insurance company do it If the patient can’t judge the necessity for services, make the physician get approval in advance

The objective was to create a market mechanism If the patient can’t shop on the basis of price because information is not available, have the insurance companies perform that function If the patient is not comfortable negotiating a price for services, let the insurance company do it

Types of incentive reimbursement DRG reimbursement---hospital is paid a fixed amount per diagnostic admission to the hospital Capitation payment--healthcare provider is paid a fixed monthly premium to provide comprehensive services

Concerns The primary concern with incentive reimbursement is quality –Will it cause physicians and hospitals to provide Too few medical goods and services? Goods and services of substandard quality?

Chapter 14 Summary –As costs increased, the government, employers, and patients demanded that hospitals be run more like businesses and less like charities –As this occurred, some feel the industry lost its traditional characteristic of quality and compassion