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More Money, Better Health? New study finds
that Medicare Beneficiaries with Higher
Medical Spending have better Health Outcomes
June 5, 2011-- A new study from George Mason
University and the Urban Institute reveals
that greater spending on medical services
means better overall health for Medicare
participants. Health Administration and
Policy Professor Jack Hadley and his
co-authors, Urban Institute researchers
Timothy Waidmann, Stephen Zuckerman, and
Robert Berenson, analyzed data from more
than 17,000 Medicare beneficiaries to draw
this conclusion.
Previous reports showed that Medicare
spending varies greatly by geographic area,
but with little to show for it-the health
outcomes for people who live in expensive
geographic areas are not necessarily better
than those who live in less expensive
geographic areas. As a result, policymakers
have considered limiting Medicare payments
in high-cost areas.
But, as described in their recent study,
"Medical Spending and the Health of the
Elderly," the research team found that
spending more on Medicare medical expenses
actually resulted in greater survival and a
better overall health score, using an index
that measures perceived health and activity
limitations.
"The motivation for the study was a large
body of research that's been done over the
past ten years that typically has found that
there is little or no relationship between
how much Medicare spends and the health
outcomes of elderly people," Hadley says.
But these studies looked at large swathes of
populations, typically by geographic
location, and used averages to draw their
conclusions. "The implication was that
higher spending was not contributing to
better health," Hadley says.
He explains, "While that finding is very
persuasive, it doesn't look at individuals
and the amount of medical care that they
each receive." So in this study, the
research team used data from the Medicare
Current Beneficiary Survey, which collects
extensive information from Medicare
participants over a three-year span, to
determine whether a relationship existed
between medical spending and better health.
"The surveys provide much richer information
about the person's health condition than one
can typically get from insurance claims
data," Hadley says.
The full results of the study will appear in
an upcoming edition of the journal Health
Services Research, which
is published by the Health
Research and Educational Trust and
is an official journal of AcademyHealth.
"Over this three-year period-controlling for
people's health when they first come into
the survey and new diagnoses they may have
had over the course of the three years-what
was their health like at the end of the
observation period? And did that vary with
how much medical care they received as
individuals?" Hadley asks.
The statistical analysis indicates that the
individuals' health did vary with their
medical care spending. Over a three-year
span, for a 10 percent increase in medical
spending, there was 1.9 percent increase in
the patient's health score, called the
Health and Activity Limitations Index and a
1.5 percent greater survival probability.
The researchers classify this finding as a
"modest effect" but stress that "the key
thing is that we did find a positive
relationship as opposed to other studies
which have suggested that there's no
relationship between how much care a person
receives and what their health outcomes
are."
"This suggests that policymakers need to
understand that across-the-board reductions
in Medicare spending in a geographic area or
on a national level could have harmful
effects on beneficiaries' health," The Urban
Institute's Timothy Waidmann explains.
"To
look for inefficiencies, you need to look
more closely at specific conditions and
diseases and how those are treated. Analysis
from 40,000 feet just doesn't do that for
you."
The study was supported from a grant from
the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's program
on Health Care Financing and Organization.
The abstract can be viewed online here and
are full findings are available upon
request.
About George Mason University
George Mason University is an innovative,
entrepreneurial institution with global
distinction in a range of academic fields.
Located in Northern Virginia near
Washington, D.C., Mason provides students
access to diverse cultural experiences and
the most sought-after internships and
employers in the country. Mason offers
strong undergraduate and graduate degree
programs in engineering and information
technology, organizational psychology,
health care and visual and performing arts.
With Mason professors conducting
groundbreaking research in areas such as
climate change, public policy and the
biosciences, George Mason University is a
leading example of the modern, public
university. George Mason University-Where
Innovation Is Tradition.
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