Recession Scrambling Health Spending in U.S.

As more people lose their jobs and health insurance, they're turning to federal programs such as Medicaid, report says

Posted: February 24, 2009

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, Feb. 24 (HealthDay News) -- Although millions of Americans have lost their jobs -- and their health insurance -- during the current recession, health care spending in the United States is expected to have its largest single-year increase in 2009.

That's the surprising conclusion of a report released Tuesday by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).

"Private spending [spending by private health insurance] is expected to slow in 2008-2009 to a 15-year low due to the impact of the recession" as more people lose their jobs and with them, their employer-based health insurance, CMS economist Andrea Sisko, one of the authors of the government report, said during a Monday teleconference. "Conversely, public spending growth is expected to accelerate through 2009, in part, due to increased Medicaid enrollment and expenditures, something that is typically seen in a recession."

Sisko noted the projections did not take into account the recently enacted $787 billion stimulus package or the 2010 federal budget proposal, to be unveiled Thursday by President Barack Obama, or any health care reforms that might be proposed by the new administration.

The report by economists from CMS, titled Health Spending Projections Through 2018: Recession Effects Add Uncertainty To The Outlook, was published in the Feb. 24 online edition of Health Affairs.

The release of the CMS report comes on the same day as a new report from the U.S. Institute of Medicine that calls for President Barack Obama and Congress to come up with solutions for the 45.7 million Americans not covered by health insurance and to find ways to stem the tide of growing health care costs.

And in a televised address Tuesday night, Obama plans to outline his goals for his first year in office, including his pledge to reform health care. The White House says the President believes that out-of-control costs are the main obstacle to providing insurance coverage for all.

The new CMS report seeks to project health care spending for the next 10 years.

For instance, by 2018 health care spending is projected to reach $4.4 trillion -- accounting for 20.3 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP). In 2008, health care spending reached 16.6 percent of GDP. In 2009, health care's share of GDP is expected to reach 17.6 percent of GDP, the largest one-year increase ever seen, the report said.

As spending by private health care insurance reaches a 15-year low as more people lose their jobs, spending by the federal and state governments is expected to grow from $1 trillion in 2008 to $1.2 trillion in 2009, an increase of 7.4 percent. This growth is being fueled by more people losing their jobs and then electing to sign up for Medicaid, the report authors said.

Once the recession starts to ease next year, there should be an upturn in both private and public health care spending, according to the report. Starting in 2010, private health care spending is expected to rise by 4.2 percent and increase to 6.1 percent in 2018, Sisko said.

Among the report's highlights:

One expert thinks the CMS report reflects the true impact of the recession on health care.

"This just shows you that hard times affect people's ability to obtain health care," said Paul Precht, director for policy and communications at the Medicare Rights Center. "If it weren't for Medicaid, it would be a lot worse."

Fecyjzov

ndj506 comment4 ,

Fecyjzov of LA @ Jun 22, 2009 16:57:20 PM

Sanctioned Monopoly

Why not simply pare monopolistic favors? Take a look at everything: granted monopolies with drug patents, licencing of medical trades, licencing of facilities, and even things like supply restrictions of trades in education. In other words, significanly increase market characteristics in medical service and drug arenas. We pay more because chose to;-)

c. herrick of CA @ Feb 25, 2009 14:52:09 PM

Physician greed

Physician greed is a result of health care insurance greed. Physicians are forced to except "fee schedules" designed and owned by insurance companies whereby a physician who provides a valid medical service is forced to jump through layers of hoops in order to be compensated for services provided. Each year this "fee schedule" is changed and physicians are forced to accept less and less for there services. Its no wonder that fewer and fewer of our brightest want to enter the profession of medicine. In times past, a physician would charge what they feel there services were worth and the insurance companies would pay. arbitrage, and corporate greed have spawned this physician greed. It is a vicious circle! Tell a man how much he should be paid, that is a crime!! Attorneys don't have to live by the same standards, companies don't have to live by these standards, why should physicians? Because they took an oath to help people? What is wrong with earning a healthy living while helping people. If the insurance companies would design a fee schedule that would allow a physician to earn a living, maybe physicians wouldn't be so aggressive. after all, an office visit only pays a doctor $35.00. So if a guy is lucky, and after working for 20 years he might make what a first year attorney makes in an hour.

Just my thoughts. Lets examine further how much the insurance companies are making in comparison to what the physicians are making. Seems disproportional to me.

Chris, Not a doctor!

Chris of CA @ Feb 24, 2009 23:30:06 PM

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