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Financing Health Care: Spending, Jobs, and Government Roles in the U.S.

Learn about health care spending, its impact on the economy, the growing health care job market, and the roles of government in both publically and privately funded health care programs.

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Financing Health Care: Spending, Jobs, and Government Roles in the U.S.

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  1. Component 1:Introduction to Health Careand Public Health in the U.S. Unit 4: Financing Health Care Lecture 1 This material was developed by Oregon Health & Science University, funded by the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology under Award Number IU24OC000015.

  2. Lectures in This Unit • Lecture 1: Distinction between Publically Funded and Privately Funded Health Care • Lecture 2: Single-Payer Systems versus Multiple-Payer Systems • Lecture 3: Insurance and Third-Party Payers • Lecture 4: Government Payment Programs Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  3. Topics in This Lecture • Health care spending • Economic impact and gross domestic product • Health care jobs • Publically funded health care • Privately funded health care • 3 roles of government in health care • Important federal laws Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  4. Health Care Spending and the U.S. GDP • Gross domestic product (GDP) reflects value of goods and services we produce • GDP was $14.1 trillion in 2009 • Health care spending was 17.6% of GDP • One of the highest amounts in the world • The U.S. spent $8,086/person on health care • Health care spending expected to be one fifth of GDP by 2019 Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  5. Major Areas ofHealth Care Spending • 31% hospital care • 21% physicians and medical laboratories • 10% prescription drugs • Health care spending grows faster than most other sectors of the economy • Spending on government programs has increased at slower rate than private spending • Since 1999, family premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance have increased by 131% Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  6. Health Care Jobs • 10 of the 20 fastest-growing occupations are related to health care • 14.3 million jobs in 2008 • 40% of jobs in hospitals • 21% in nursing and residential care • 16% in physician offices • 3.2 million new jobs between 2008–2018, due to growth of elderly population Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  7. Privately Funded Health Care • 2 categories: • State-licensed health insurance organizations • Commercial insurers • Blue Cross/Blue Shield • Managed care organizations • Self-funded employer-sponsored insurance plans • 1,200 not-for-profit and for-profit insurance companies • 36% of all health care spending • 55% of Americans have insurance through jobs Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  8. State-LicensedInsurance Organizations • Commercial health insurers • Most are owned by stockholders or stock companies • Mutual insurance companies are owned by their policyholders • BlueCross BlueShield • Association of 39 different companies in 50 states • Locally operated; some are for-profit • Largest insurer, covering 1 in 3 Americans Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  9. State-LicensedInsurance Organizations (cont’d) • Managed care organizations • Combine health insurance and health care services • Cost control and utilization control • Some hire their own doctors and have their own facilities • 3 main types: • Health maintenance organizations (HMOs) • Preferred provider organizations (PPOs) • Point-of-service (POS) plans Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  10. Self-Funded Employer Plans • Health benefit plans regulated by federal law • Created by employers, employee organizations, or a combination • Employer assumes risk for workers and pays for care directly • Employer may choose to have a third-party administrator administer the plan Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  11. Publically Funded Health Care • Government programs, some of them funded through income taxes and payroll taxes • Begin in federal legislation • Voted into law by Congress • Help specific population groups • Run by federal government and federal-state partnerships Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  12. Examples of Government Health Care Programs • Medicare • Medicaid • Children’s Health Insurance Program • Veterans Health Administration • TRICARE • Indian Health Service Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  13. Roles of U.S. Government • 3 key roles: provider, funder, lawmaker • Provider of health care services • Veterans Health Administration and TRICARE • Indian Health System • Supports research into new models of health care • Funder of third-party services • Outsourcing of health care services • Outsourcing of claims paperwork • Outsourcing of grants Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  14. Roles of Government (cont’d) • Lawmaker role 1: Ensure fair competition • Sherman Anti-Trust Act, 1890 • Prohibits monopolies and restraint of trade • Clayton Act, 1914 • Prohibits price-fixing and exclusive dealings • Lawmaker role 2: Protect the public • Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act created FDA, 1938 • Hatch-Waxman Act, 1984 • American with Disabilities Act, 1990 Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  15. Social Security Act • Passed in 1935, part of the New Deal • Established a system of old-age benefits for workers • Also created: • Benefits for victims of industrial accidents • Unemployment insurance • Aid for dependent mothers and children, the blind, and the physically handicapped • Vocational training • Funds for family health programs Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  16. Hill-Burton Act • Hospital Survey and Construction Act, passed in 1946 • Stimulated construction of facilities • Foundation of today’s infrastructure for hospitals and other health care organizations • Continues to authorize funding for hospitals, nursing homes, health centers, rehabilitation facilities • Imposes anti-discrimination rules • Requires participation in Medicare and Medicaid Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  17. Stark Laws • Named for Congressman Pete Stark • Govern ability of physicians to refer patients to facilities in which they have a financial interest(“self-referral”) • Bans self-referrals to clinical laboratories and certain other services under Medicare and Medicaid • Major exception: a physician within a group practice may refer a patient for certain imaging services provided by that practice, as long as the patient receives written notice of other imaging clinics Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

  18. Summary • The U.S. spends nearly one fifth of GDP on health care • The health care job market is growing • 2 main types of health insurance: • Privately funded health care insurance • State-licensed insurers • Self-funded employer-sponsored plans • Publically funded (government) programs • The federal government has 3 roles in health care: provide services, fund services, and pass laws that ensure fair competition and protect the public Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 2.0/Spring 2011 Component 1/Unit 4-1

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