Howard Gleckman, Senior Contributor
Feb 13, 2019, 04:02pm
The pace of medical spending for older adults
is slowing, and one highly-respected health economist gives much of the credit
to the increased use of medications that reduce the risk of heart disease. That
is good news, but it largely ignores the growing costs of long-term care and
the increasing burden on family caregivers, whose assistance is not included in
this analysis.
To put it simply: The increased use of drugs
such as statins is improving heart health. Not only will that slow the growth
of medical costs for seniors, it may help them live longer. However, it will
not keep them healthy forever. They will, in effect, live long enough to suffer
from frailty of old age. And that means they will need more personal care that
most often is delivered by family members.
To oversimplify: Instead of dying of heart
attacks at 60, more of us will live to 85, when we will get dementia. That’s
why we need to shift resources from medical care to long-term supports and
services.
Less heart disease
In the study published in the February edition of the
journal Health Affairs,Harvard University health economist David
Cutler and his co-authors calculated that the per beneficiary growth rate of
Medicare spending slowed substantially from 1992-2012. Until 2004, program
spending per enrollee rose by 3.8 percent annually. From 2005-2012, it grew by
only 1.1 percent.
Overall Medicare spending grew much faster,
largely because so many more people turned 65 and enrolled in the program. But
spending for each beneficiary grew far more slowly than many predicted. By
2012, actual Medicare spending was about $3,000 less than forecast.
Cutler and his colleges dug into the data (and
made some important adjustments to the available numbers) to try to understand
why. This is what they found:
Half of the lower-the-expected spending was
due to fewer acute cardiovascular-related medical events, such as strokes,
heart attacks, or acute episodes of congestive heart failure. And they
attributed half of that savings to greater use of medications that prevent or
control conditions such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or diabetes.
More use of drugs
Few new drug therapies were developed for
these diseases during this period. But consumers used existing drugs more
frequently, in part to lower prices and creation of the Medicare Part D drug
benefit.
Better heart health means less hospital care,
fewer heart surgeries, and less need for post-acute care. Hospital admissions
for heart disease are off by 56 percent since 1999, and admissions for strokes
declined by 41 percent, the study reports.
And, the authors’ add, there is more
opportunity to improve heart health and save money. Only 55-60 percent of
American are controlling their risk factors for cardiovascular disease.
While the news on the health cost side is
positive, there is another side to the story. Cutler and colleagues looked at a
broad definition of medical spending that mimics the government’s National
Health Expenditure Accounts. But personal health
spending generally excludes long-term care services and supports.
And it entirely ignores personal care provided by family members.
And that’s where matters get interesting.
Widespread use of medications to prevent heart attacks or strokes keeps us
healthier for longer. But it doesn’t make us immortal or immune from the
frailty of old age.
A growing challenge
We will live longer in old age, and indeed
life expectancy among older adults in the US continues to increase (though it
has reversed a bit in the past few years for those under 65). Longer lives, however, make more of us susceptible to chronic conditions of
very old age such as Alzheimer’s disease and some other dementias, pulmonary
disease, and severe arthritis. It even is true with heart failure. Medications
can reduce repeated hospitalizations for the disease but they won’t prevent it
from slowly and inexorably sapping a senior’s strength.
We are left then, with a growing challenge.
Medical costs for those with chronic conditions and functional
or cognitive limitations are two- to three-times higher than for those with
chronic conditions alone. Cutler and colleagues attempt to adjust
their data for demographic changes but because they looked backward to 2012,
they did not capture the coming explosion in the population of those 80 and
older—when those limitations are most common.
We are left with a classic good news/bad news
story. For example, some dementias, such as stroke-related or vascular dementia, may also become less common as
medications prevent the underlying conditions. But Alzheimer’s may become more
common as more of us live to a very old age.
While Cutler and his colleagues didn’t put it
this way, their research strengthens the argument that the US needs to shift
resources from medical care to long-term supports and services.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/howardgleckman/2019/02/13/seniors-health-costs-may-be-moderating-but-the-need-for-long-term-care-may-be-growing/?sf209887415=1#385b46cd2030
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