Lecture 9 Tuesday, October 2 Healthcare and the Market.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
More Security and Stability If You Have Health Insurance, the Obama Plan: Ends discrimination against people with pre-existing conditions. Limits premium.
Advertisements

21 Health Care McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
RESOURCE ALLOCATION & THE MARKET Demand, supply and the market Sources of failure in the market for health care The insurance system of funding health.
Health Insurance, Risk, and Responsibility after the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Tom Baker 2010 Hawley Lecture.
Shift to Employer-Based Health Insurance in the United States Julie Babb, MD Louisiana State University Health Science Center - Shreveport.
FIFTY YEARS IN MEDICINE, : WHERE ARE WE HEADED NOW? John P. Geyman, M.D. 50 th Reunion, Class of 1960 UCSF School of Medicine.
Actuaries Club of Philadelphia Meeting February 16, 2010 John Dante, FSA, MAAA, FCA President and CEO Dante Actuarial Consulting, LLC.
Ronald F. White, Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy College of Mount St. Joseph.
© 2013 Pearson. How do you avoid buying a lemon?
Universal Healthcare for America By Catherine McKeller English 102, Section 5232.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND 1 Benefit Design: Access, Affordability, Risk Pooling Cathy Schoen Senior Vice President, Commonwealth Fund Benefits in Health Insurance.
Part Two Economics of Health Care Is Health Care similar to other commodities? Craig A. Pedersen, R.Ph., Ph.D.
Government and Health Care Roughly 15 cents of every dollar spent in US is on health care US health care spending equaled $5841 per person in 2002 Governments.
Single Payer 101 Kao-Ping Chua Jack Rutledge Fellow, American Medical Student Association.
Comparing Health Insurance Reform Models Cliff Gagnier June 6, 2007.
The role of insurance in health care, part 2 Today: More on moral hazard Other issues in insurance Problems with insurance.
Major Health Issues The Affordable Healthcare Act.
Financing Systems Part 2 Social and Private Insurance Unit 7.
Chapter 6: Health Insurance Chapter 6 Health Insurance Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Growing Unaffordability of Health Care: Incremental vs. Real Health Care Reform John P. Geyman, MD Professor Emeritus- Family Medicine University of Washington,
 You pay a premium into an insurance pool. In the event that you are sick or injured, the insurance policy pays all or part of your medical expenses.
 Protects the standard of living of the survivors  At the policy holder’s death, the insurance company pays survivors the face value of a life insurance.
Universal Health-Care Will this Policy Benefit the United States? By Matthew Lokant.
THE HEALTH CARE MARKET Chapter 9.
The High Cost of Healthcare In America Today. Addressing the Social Problem Not always offered through employment High premiums Malpractice lawsuits Uninsured.
Health Care Reform Quynh Smith. Sources of Inefficiency in the Health Care Delivery System   We spend a substantial amount on high cost, low-value treatments.
Health Reform: What It Means to Our Community. Health Reform: Key Provisions o Provides coverage to 32 million uninsured people by o Changes insurance.
CHCWG DRAFT March 2, 2006 Hearing from the American People: Preliminary Overview of Sources and Reports March 2006 Caution: Preliminary Data Do not cite.
Lecture 3 Tuesday, September 9 THE MARKET: HOW IT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK.
Health Care Reform in America Facing Up:. President Obama and Healthcare Reform “Health care reform is no longer just a moral imperative, it’s a fiscal.
Chapter 22 Health Care Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Being a Wise Consumer; Insurance & Medical Costs Ch. 26.
Reform of the Dutch Health Care System
President Obama’s Health Care Plan A Plan for America.
International Health Systems: Models for the U.S. Canadian Health Care System in 8 minutes flat!
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Our Healthcare Reform Law Why do we need it? What does it do for us?
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 23 Health Care.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2002 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Chapter 20 Health Care.
This flyer prepared for Durham for Obama Health Care Group 2009 This month your Senators and Representatives (below) will be home and they need to know.
Copyright McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2002 The Health Care Industry Quality of Care Limited Access Increasing Demand for Health Care Role of Health Insurance.
Health Care Facts and Guiding Principles for Health Care Reform Public Employees Union, Local #1.
3 August 2004 Public Health Practice III: FINANCING PUBLIC HEALTH REFORM Thomas E. Novotny MD MPH University of California San Francisco Institute for.
A L ESSON IN H EALTH E CONOMICS C HAPTER 13 Code Blue Health Science Edition 4.
The Great Healthcare Debate Presentation made by: Alex Garcia, Carlo Torres, Edgar Castillo, Gricelda Vera, Lorena Arroyo, and Margarito Rofledo.
ANNOUNCEMENTS 1.New Chapter on Finance is available at 2.Updated chapters on Healthcare and the Environment also available at 3.All.
Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 21-1 The Health Care Industry Economic Implications of Rising Costs Why the Rapid Rise in Costs? Supply Factors.
Health Care Reform Obamacare. Hayak vs. Keynes Goal Attempts to take the 50 million uninsured and put them in a subsidized private market for health.
(Fortune, 2002, p. 16).  Competition  Barriers to Entry  Regulation.
American Healthcare By: Sofia Diaco, Alexzaundra Culley, and Ryan Jamison.
Copyright McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2005 The Health Care Industry Quality of Care Limited Access Increasing Demand for Health Care Role of Health Insurance.
Human Needs. Which needs are most important? #5 #4 #3 #2 Most Important.
Lecture 3 Tuesday, September 11 THE MARKET: HOW IT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK.
S OCIAL S ECURITY AND H EALTH C ARE LECTURE – ISSUES In the U.S., persons 65 years or older number more than 12% of the population—that is close to one.
Chapter 22 Health Care Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of.
More Security and Stability If You Have Health Insurance, the Obama Plan: Ends discrimination against people with pre-existing conditions. Limits premium.
22 CHAPTER PUBLIC SECTOR ECONOMICS: The Role of Government in the American Economy Randall Holcombe Health Care.
Introduction How Much Money does the United States Spend on Health Care? What Types of Government-Supported Health Insurance Are Available? What Types.
TOF 14/3/2016 Welcome!!! Who are you? – International students – Get your keychaines! Practical stuff… – Program – Evaluation – Sleeping and Money Who.
U.S. Health Care System – Jenny Lee INEKO, Michigan Law School Student June 14, 2004.
An Economic Perspective
The Big Healthcare Issues
24 Health Care McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Health Insurance Supply
Healthcare and the Market
HEALTH CARE POLICY.
Healthcare and the Market
Chapter 22 This chapter addresses the rising cost of health care in the United States. We will discuss both the economic and noneconomic costs associated.
Chapter 22 This chapter addresses the rising cost of health care in the United States. We will discuss both the economic and noneconomic costs associated.
Health Care Policy Public Policy.
Presentation transcript:

Lecture 9 Tuesday, October 2 Healthcare and the Market

WHAT ARE THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF HEALTH CARE AS A COMMODITY? 1.Extraordinary value of the service 2.Ethical issues in distribution: some rationing process is inevitable 3.Information costs for average consumer 4.The problem of preventative medicine: The market for Health vs the market for Treatment 5.Supply generates demand 6.Competition between providers leads to over- investment

WHAT ARE THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF HEALTH CARE AS A COMMODITY? 1.Extraordinary value of the service 2.Ethical issues in distribution: some rationing process is inevitable 3.Information costs for average consumer 4.The problem of preventative medicine: The market for Health vs the market for Treatment 5.Supply generates demand 6.Competition between providers leads to over- investment

WHAT ARE THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF HEALTH CARE AS A COMMODITY? 1.Extraordinary value of the service 2.Ethical issues in distribution: some rationing process is inevitable 3.Information costs for average consumer 4.The problem of preventative medicine: The market for Health vs the market for Treatment 5.Supply generates demand 6.Competition between providers leads to over- investment

WHAT ARE THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF HEALTH CARE AS A COMMODITY? 1.Extraordinary value of the service 2.Ethical issues in distribution: some rationing process is inevitable 3.Information costs for average consumer 4.The problem of preventative medicine: The market for Health vs the market for Treatment 5.Supply generates demand 6.Competition between providers leads to over- investment

WHAT ARE THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF HEALTH CARE AS A COMMODITY? 1.Extraordinary value of the service 2.Ethical issues in distribution: some rationing process is inevitable 3.Information costs for average consumer 4.The problem of preventative medicine: The market for Health vs the market for Treatment 5.Supply generates demand 6.Competition between providers leads to over- investment

WHAT ARE THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF HEALTH CARE AS A COMMODITY? 1.Extraordinary value of the service 2.Ethical issues in distribution: some rationing process is inevitable 3.Information costs for average consumer 4.The problem of preventative medicine: The market for Health vs the market for Treatment 5.Supply generates demand 6.Competition between providers leads to over- investment

WHAT ARE THE DISTINCTIVE FEATURES OF HEALTH CARE AS A COMMODITY? 1.Extraordinary value of the service 2.Ethical issues in distribution: some rationing process is inevitable 3.Information costs for average consumer 4.The problem of preventative medicine: The market for Health vs the market for Treatment 5.Supply generates demand 6.Competition between providers leads to over- investment

The U.S. System 1.Extremely complex & incoherent 2.Most expensive in the world and rapidly increasing costs

The U.S. System 1.Extremely complex & incoherent 2.Most expensive in the world and rapidly increasing costs

The U.S. System 1.Extremely complex & incoherent 2.Most expensive in the world and rapidly increasing costs 3.Lower access than any other country. Only rich country without universal system.

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Below poverty line % of poverty line % of poverty line above 200% of poverty line Private insurance through work No insurance Medicaid

The dilemma of private insurance exclusions & the problem of “mandates” 1.Insurance companies make money by selling insurance to people who are healthy. This means: 2.They increase their profits by refusing to insure people with existing health problem and by refusing to renew insurance once a person gets sick. 3.To guarantee universal access to insurance, these practices have to be prevented. Insurance companies have to be prevented from refusing insurance because of existing conditions. BUT 4.This is only possible if healthy people are required to buy health insurance. Otherwise they will wait until they get sick and then buy insurance. 5.SO, if you want (a) to guarantee universal access, and (b) maintain a private health insurance market, you have to (c) require all people to buy insurance. This is called a “mandate.”

The U.S. System 1.Extremely complex & incoherent 2.Most expensive in the world and rapidly increasing costs 3.Lower access than any other country. Only rich country without universal system. 4.Minimal concern with prevention 5.Worse health results than other rich countries

The U.S. System 1.Extremely complex & incoherent 2.Most expensive in the world and rapidly increasing costs 3.Lower access than any other country. Only rich country without universal system. 4.Minimal concern with prevention 5.Worse health results than other rich countries

Rank = 34 Rank = 6

Two arguments in defense of a private market-based health insurance system: 1.Competition spurs cost saving and innovation 2.Free-markets solve the “moral hazard problem”

The “Moral Hazard Problem” A moral hazard = A situation in which there is no incentive to worry about costs since someone else is paying the bill. Insurance sometimes creates a moral hazard by enabling people to engage in riskier behavior than they would otherwise. Moral Hazard in Healthcare = If you have insurance, you will tend to overuse medical services since you do not have to pay each time you go to the doctor. This has the effect of imposing costs on others. Solution = Rely on the market and competition to force down prices and enforce personal responsibility through co-pays and other charges.

Two Comparisons 1.The U.S. Veteran’s Administration Hospital system 2.The Canadian Single-payer System

Administrative overhead as a % of total costs, 2003 Source: New England Journal of Medicine 2003 (except for VHA estimate)

REASONS FOR HIGH QUALITY & LOW COST IN VETERANS HEALTH ADMINISTRATION HOSPITALS Economies of scale Ability to buy drugs at a reduced cost by negotiating discounts Incentives for investing in quality Strong incentives for preventive medicine because of the life-time link to the patient Efficient medical record and information systems and health monitoring because of this life-time connection

THE CANADIAN SYSTEM Universal Comprehensive Portable Accessible Publicly administered Diversity in organization of actual delivery: single doctor practice; community clinics; group practices; public hospitals and clinics Big Irony: In Canada there is universal public provision of insurance for everyone, but greater freedom of choice by patients and less bureaucratic hassle for doctors

Why does the U.S. not have a Universal Health System even with the new reforms? 1.Power and opposition of insurance companies 2.Power and opposition of pharmaceutical companies 3.Ideological anti-statism: strength of conservative opposition to public solutions 4.Massive misinformation campaigns about alternatives