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Healthcare
spending in 2007 increased at lowest rate in
nine years, with Prescription Drug Spending
Growth slowing to lowest rate since 1963,
study finds
[Jan 06, 2009] U.S. health care spending by
both the public and private sectors grew at
a rate of 6.1% to $2.2 trillion in 2007,
down from growth of 6.7% in 2006, according
to a study by federal auditors published
Tuesday in the journal
Health Affairs,
the
Wall Street Journal
reports (Fuhrmans/Zhang,
Wall Street Journal,
1/6).
The
2007 growth rate is the slowest recorded
since 1998, according to the report, which
was prepared by analysts from the
CMS
Office
of the Actuary (Young,
The Hill, 1/6).
However, health care spending consumed 16.2%
of the U.S. gross domestic product in 2007,
up from 16% in 2006, "suggesting its share
of GDP will climb as the economy remains
mired in a protracted recession," the
Journal
reports (Wall
Street Journal,
1/6).
More than half of the drop-off in spending
growth can be linked to decreased spending
on prescription drugs, according to the
report (Pugh,
McClatchy/Miami Herald,
1/6).
Spending
on drugs rose by 4.9% to $227.5 billion in
2007, compared with an increase of 8.6% in
2006 and a yearly average of 9.4% from 2001
to 2006.
Lead study author Micah Hartman, a
statistician for the CMS Office of the
Actuary, said the drop in drug outlays can
be attributed to increased use of lower-cost
generic drugs, slower growth for drug prices
and safety concerns that have decreased
sales of some drugs (Pear,
New York Times, 1/6).
FDA
in 2007 issued 68 black box warnings -- its
most severe warning -- to appear on drug
labels, compared with 58 in 2006 and 21 in
2003.
Insurers are encouraging the use of generics
by charging lower copayments for certain
drugs and higher copays for others that they
may want consumers to avoid for safety and
financial reasons.
Several grocery chains and large retailers
also have contributed to the trend through
generic drug discount programs. In addition,
several top-selling brand-name drugs lost
patent protection in 2006, allowing generic
competitors to enter the market (Freking,
AP/Philadelphia Inquirer,
1/6).
Prescription drugs made up 10% of all health
care spending in 2007, according to the
report. Spending on hospitals, which
accounted for 31% of health care outlays in
2007, increased by 7.3% to $696.5 billion,
compared with an increase of 6.9% in 2006,
the report states.
Spending
on doctors, which accounted for 18% of
health care outlays in 2007, grew by 5.9% to
$393.8 billion, compared with an increase of
6.4% in 2006, according to the report (New
York Times,
1/6).
The report also showed that the government
paid for a larger portion of the nation's
health care in 2007.
Spending by federal, state and local
governments made up 46.2% of total health
care outlays, up from 45.3% in 2004 and
37.6% in 1970.
Public spending on health care grew faster
than spending by employers and other private
sources in recent years, according to the
report.
The increase in government health care
outlays was partially caused by changes in
Medicare, according to federal auditors.
The Medicare prescription drug benefit cost
$47.6 billion in 2007, up from $40.5 billion
in 2006 (Wall
Street Journal,
1/6).
Administrative costs for Medicare increased
by 62.5% when the prescription drug benefit
was launched in 2006, and Medicare's
administrative costs increased by 10.7% in
2007.
Overall Medicare spending increased by 7.2%
to $431.2 billion in 2007, compared with an
increase of 18.5% in 2006. Medicaid spending
in 2007 increased by 6.4% to $329.4 billion,
the report found.
Private health insurance premiums increased
by 6% to $775 billion in 2007, the same rate
as in 2006, but less than the 10.7% increase
in 2002.
The slower growth rate reflects fewer small
employers offering health coverage and
increasing enrollment in health savings
accounts and high-deductible health plans,
according to the study.
Out-of-pocket spending by patients increased
by 5.3% in 2007 to $268.6 billion, compared
with an increase of 3.3% in 2006, the study
found.
The portion of household income being spent
on health care increased to 6% in 2007, up
from 5.4% in 2001 (McClatchy/Miami
Herald,
1/6).
Comments
CMS Chief Actuary Richard Foster said, "In
2007, the cost growth overall was the lowest
in quite some time," adding, "True, we're
happy about that, but it was still 6.1%. How
much did GDP go up in that year?
"How
much did any of your wages increase? The
6.1% was still faster than GDP, so we still
have the affordability problem" (The
Hill,
1/6). Foster said, "I wouldn't expect the
good news to continue" (Reichard,
CQ HealthBeat,
1/6).
CMS acting Administrator Kerry Weems said,
"This is another reminder that the cost of
health care continues to be a real and
pressing concern facing the American public
and the federal government."
He added, "This report is a stark reminder
that we must redouble our ongoing efforts to
reform the delivery of health care services
in this country to bring about the goal of
affordable, high-quality health for all
Americans" (McClatchy/Miami
Herald,
1/6).
The report is available
online.
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