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Decomposing Growth In Spending Finds Annual Cost Of Treatment Contributed Most To Spending Growth, 1980–2006
36
Citations
12
References
2014
Year
Health PoliticsHealth Care FinanceEconomic GrowthProductivityGovernment SpendingEconomic AnalysisPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchPublic PolicyEconomicsPublic ExpenditureHealth PolicyChronic Disease PreventionCost EffectivenessPublic Health PolicyEconomic EvaluationKenneth ThorpeHealth Care SpendingPublic FinanceHealth EconomicsSpending GrowthBusinessHealth Care Cost
Researchers have disagreed about factors driving up health care spending since the 1980s. One camp, led by Kenneth Thorpe, identifies rising numbers of people being treated for chronic diseases as a major factor. Charles Roehrig and David Rousseau reach the opposite conclusion: that three-quarters of growth in average spending reflects the rising costs of treating given diseases. We reexamined sources of spending growth using data from four nationally representative surveys. We found that rising costs of treatment accounted for 70 percent of growth in real average health care spending from 1980 to 2006. The contribution of shares of the population treated for given diseases increased in 1997-2006, but even then it accounted for only one-third of spending growth. We highlight the fact that Thorpe's inclusion of population growth as part of disease prevalence explains the appreciable difference in results. An important policy implication is that programs to better manage chronic diseases may only modestly reduce average spending growth.
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