Trading Choice for Savings
More patients are willing to limit their choice of physicians and hospitals to save on out-of-pocket medical costs, the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) reported. Between 2001 and 2003, the proportion of working-age Americans with employer health coverage willing to make this trade-off increased from 55% to 59%—after the rate had been stable since 1997, the study found. Low-income consumers were the most willing to give up provider choice in return for lower cost. In addition, the proportion of chronically ill working-age adults with employer coverage who are willing to trade choice for lower costs rose from 51% in 2001 to 56% in 2003. The study's findings were based on HSC's Community Tracking Household Survey. In 2003, the survey included 20,500 adults aged 18-64 with employer-sponsored health coverage; in 2001 it included 28,000 working-age adults with employer coverage.
Physicians Prefer Paper
When it comes to recording patient health information, most physicians and hospitals still prefer paper to the computer, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. Ambulatory medical care surveys conducted from 2001 to 2003 revealed that only 17% of physicians' offices had electronic medical records to support patient care. Less than a third of hospital facilities (31% of hospital emergency departments and 29% of outpatient departments) had electronic records. Physicians who were younger than age 50 years were twice as likely as their older counterparts to utilize computerized physician order entry systems, the CDC reported.
Part B Costs Expected to Rise
Payments for Medicare Part B services—coverage for physician visits and outpatient services—are expected to grow at an annual average rate of about 6.9% over the next 10 years, the program's trustees announced in their annual report. More use of services such as office visits and lab and diagnostic tests account for the accelerated growth in Part B costs—and needs further detailed examination, said Mark McClellan, M.D., administrator of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Medicare's hospital fund in the meantime currently isn't expected to dry out until 2020, 1 year later than estimated in last year's report. “However, if you look at historical projections, President Bush has presided over an unprecedented drop in solvency,” countered Rep. Pete Stark (D-Calif.), ranking Democrat on the House Ways and Means health subcommittee, in a statement.
Medicare and Smoking Cessation
It's official: Medicare is adding coverage for smoking and tobacco cessation counseling for certain beneficiaries who want to kick the habit. The coverage decision applies to Medicare patients whose illness is caused or complicated by smoking, such as heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, lung disease, or osteoporosis—diseases that account for a large proportion of Medicare spending. It also applies to beneficiaries whose medications are compromised by tobacco use. “It is our hope that Medicare's decision to pay for smoking cessation counseling will encourage and help seniors quit smoking once and for all,” Ronald Davis, M.D., trustee with the American Medical Association, said in a statement. Of the 440,000 Americans who die annually from smoking-related disease, 300,000 are aged 65 and older, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC in 2002 estimated that 57% of smokers aged 65 and older reported a desire to quit smoking.
FDA Guidance on Drug Risks
The Food and Drug Administration has released three guidance documents to help industry improve its methods of assessing and monitoring the risks associated with drugs and biological products in clinical development and general use. One document addresses risk minimization action plans (RiskMAPs) that industry could use to address specific risk-related goals and objectives. How the new guidance protocols would specifically address a drug with red safety flags like Vioxx (rofecoxib), “is hard to speculate,” Paul J. Seligman, M.D., director of the Office of Pharmacoepidemiology and Statistical Science with the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said at a press conference. “It would be difficult for us to come up with a drug that would allow us to walk through the guidances,” as all drugs need to be evaluated on a case-by-case basis, Dr. Seligman said.
Report on Health Care Disparities
Disparities related to race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status continue to plague the health care system, according to the 2004 National Healthcare Disparities Report from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Using comparable data from 2000 and 2001, researchers analyzed 38 measures of effectiveness for health care and 31 measures of access to care. Of the measures tracked for these two consecutive years, AHRQ found that blacks received poorer quality of health care than whites for about two-thirds of the quality measures and had worse access to care than whites for about 40% of access measures. Hispanics, Asians, American Indians, and Alaska natives also scored lower than whites on quality measures and access to care. Low-income groups received lower quality of care for about 60% of quality measures and had worse access to care for about 80% of access measures, than those with high incomes.