September
11, 2020 Christopher Holt
The
phrase “chronic disease” gets thrown around a lot in health policy circles, and
there is widespread agreement that someone, somewhere, should do something
about it. But often the discussion fails to go much deeper than that, and
too often policymakers are focused on what to do once a person already has two
or three or even five chronic conditions. A new primer from
AAF’s Director of Human Welfare Policy Tara O’Neill Hayes and Serena Gillian
looks at the trends around chronic disease and effectively defines the problem,
but solutions will be more difficult.
A
chronic disease is a condition that persists for at least a year, requires
ongoing medical care, or interferes with daily activities. Hayes and Gillian
note that an astounding 133 million Americans have at least one chronic
disease, and roughly 30 million have five or more. The elderly, unsurprisingly,
have high rates of chronic disease, but prevalence among them is not increasing
beyond simple population growth. In other words, there are growing number
of Medicare beneficiaries with chronic disease, but only because there are
growing numbers of Medicare beneficiaries overall.
What’s
really striking, however, is that 27 percent of U.S. children suffer from
a chronic disease, and 6 percent have more than one. Hayes and Gillian write
that in 1960 less than 2 percent of children experienced a chronic disease that
negatively affected activities of daily living, but by 2010 that figure had
increased to 8 percent. Of particular note is an increase in childhood obesity
rates in recent decades. Today, 19 percent of children are obese, and juvenile
diabetes rates increased by 23 percent between 2001 and 2009 alone. The
prevalence of chronic disease is increasing across all age groups, but
certainly the increases among children are particularly jarring.
While
chronic disease may well be one of the defining public health policy problems
of the moment—note how underlying conditions are a significant contributor to
severe COVID-19 cases—its impacts are not limited to health policy. Hayes
and Gillian go on to describe the economic ramifications of America’s exploding
chronic disease challenge. They find that chronic conditions cost the United
States $3.7 trillion annually, or 19.6 percent of gross domestic product. Some
of this is direct costs related to hospitalization, medication, and emergency
care, but indirect costs, such as lost productivity, limited educational
attainment, and poor social well-being, also carry significant economic costs.
When combined, the direct and indirect costs of chronic disease could cost the
U.S. economy $42 trillion between 2016 and 2030. Chronic disease isn’t
just a public health challenge; it’s one of the foremost economic problems
facing the United States in the next few decades, particularly as an increasing
number of Americans receive health care through federally financed programs.
Hayes
and Gillian’s primer is chock full of useful charts and interesting data
points, but my key takeaway is that policymakers will have to look at the
challenge holistically, and with a view toward the long-term—never easy in
Washington, DC. While we can and should do a better job of caring for those
Americans with multiple chronic diseases, this is not a problem that will
be addressed fundamentally in the hospital. We need to go back to the beginning
and study the data. What is driving increased prevalence of these health
challenges across various age demographics? For example, can we identify
children who are at risk of developing chronic disease before they do, and what
interventions can be undertaken to prevent or mitigate it? We won’t be
able to win the battle against chronic disease if we don’t start fighting now
to prevent future chronic disease, and we can’t afford not to win this fight.
CHART
REVIEW: STATES AND SURPRISE MEDICAL BILLING
In
the absence of federal protections for patients from surprise medical bills, 30
states have implemented their own solutions, writes Christopher Holt in a recent paper. Though there is variation among state approaches
and their relative effectiveness, there is also a striking amount of similarity
in their content and design. In broad strokes, there are four categories
of response that state have taken to address provider payment for surprise bills:
(1) do nothing and leave payers and providers to fight it out; (2) rate
setting; (3) independent dispute resolution process (IDRP); and (4) combine
options 2 and 3 by establishing up-front minimum payments, while also providing
an IDRP that providers can access under specified circumstances. Both the
experiences of states as they have implemented surprise medical bill solutions,
as well as the consensus that is forming around recent state initiatives, can
inform the efforts of federal policymakers.
Disclaimer
https://www.americanactionforum.org/weekly-checkup/chronic-disease-is-more-than-a-health-care-challenge/#ixzz6Y3tbMJOo
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