Growth of Health Spending Stays Low
Published: January 7, 2013 - New York Times
WASHINGTON — National health spending climbed to $2.7
trillion in 2011, or an average of $8,700 for every person in the country, but
as a share of the economy, it remained stable for the third consecutive year,
the Obama administration said Monday.
The rate of increase in health spending, 3.9 percent
in 2011, was the same as in 2009 and 2010 — the lowest annual rates recorded in
the 52 years the government has been collecting such data.
Federal officials could not say for sure whether the
low growth in health spending represented the start of a trend or reflected the
continuing effects of the recession, which crimped the economy from December
2007 to June 2009.
Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human
services, said that gthe statistics show how the Affordable Care Act is already
making a difference,h saving money for consumers. But a report issued by the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, in her department, said that the law
had so far had gno discernible impacth on overall health spending.
Although some provisions of the law have taken effect,
the report said, gtheir influence on overall health spending through 2011 was
minimal.h
The recession increased unemployment, reduced the
number of people with private health
insurance, lowered household income and assets and therefore tended to slow
health spending, said Micah B. Hartman, a statistician at the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services.
In the report, federal
officials said that total national spending on prescription drugs and doctorsf
services grew faster in 2011 than in the year before, but that spending on
hospital care grew more slowly.
Medicaid
spending likewise grew less quickly in 2011 than in the prior year, as states
struggled with budget problems. But Medicare
spending grew more rapidly, because of an increase in gthe volume and intensityh
of doctorsf services and a one-time increase in Medicare payments to skilled nursing
homes, said the report, published in the journal Health
Affairs.
National health spending grew at roughly the same pace
as the overall economy, without adjusting for inflation, so its share of the
economy stayed the same, at 17.9 percent in 2011, where it has been since 2009.
By contrast, health spending accounted for just 13.8 percent of the economy in
2000.
Health spending grew more than 5 percent each year
from 1961 to 2007. It rose at double-digit rates in some years, including every
year from 1966 to 1984 and from 1988 to 1990.
The report did not forecast the effects of the new health
care law on future spending. Some provisions of the law, including
subsidized insurance for millions of Americans, could increase spending,
officials said. But the law also trims Medicare payments to many health care
providers and authorizes experiments to slow the growth of health spending.
gThe jury is still out whether all the innovations
wefre testing will have much impact,h said Richard S. Foster, who supervised the
preparation of the report as chief actuary of the Medicare agency. gI am
optimistic. Therefs a lot of potential. More and more health care providers
understand that the future cannot be like the past, in which health spending
almost always grew faster than the gross domestic product.h
Evidence of the new emphasis can be seen in a series
of articles published in The Archives of Internal Medicine, now known as JAMA
Internal Medicine, under the title gLess Is More.h The series highlights cases
in which gthe overuse of medical care may result in harm and in which less care
is likely to result in better health.h
Total spending for doctorsf services rose 3.6 percent
in 2011, to $436 billion, while spending for hospital care increased 4.3
percent, to $850.6 billion.
Spending on prescription drugs at retail stores
reached $263 billion in 2011, up 2.9 percent from 2010, when growth was just
four-tenths of 1 percent. The latest increase was still well below the average
increase of 7.8 percent a year from 2000 to 2010.
Federal officials said the increase in 2011 resulted
partly from rapid growth in prices for brand-name drugs.
Prices for specialty drugs, typically prescribed by
medical specialists for chronic conditions, have increased at double-digit rates
in recent years, the government said. In addition, spending on new brand-name
drugs — those brought to market in the previous two years — more than doubled
from 2010 to 2011, driven by an increase in the number of new medicines.
gIn 2011,h the report said, gspending for private
health insurance premiums increased 3.8 percent, as did spending for benefits.
Out-of-pocket spending by consumers increased 2.8 percent in 2011, accelerating
from 2.1 percent in 2010 but still slower than the average annual growth rate of
4.7 percenth from 2002 to 2008.