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Two Goals of Today’s Talk

Two Goals of Today’s Talk. Review some research on the value of increased longevity Link the results of that research to important policy questions. Review: Measuring the Value of Medical Research. Q. How do we measure the economic value of improvements in health and longevity?

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Two Goals of Today’s Talk

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  1. Two Goals of Today’s Talk • Review some research on the value of increased longevity • Link the results of that research to important policy questions

  2. Review: Measuring the Value of Medical Research Q. How do we measure the economic value of improvements in health and longevity? • We measure the value by what people are willing to pay. Q. How do we measure what people are willing to pay? A. By looking at the choices that they make.

  3. Sources of Evidence on the Value of Health and Longevity • Responses to health information (e.g. cigarettes) • Choices of safety equipment (cars etc.) • Occupational choices (what we use) • What we order for lunch

  4. Measuring the Value of Health and Longevity • Casual and empirical evidence suggests that health and longevity are important to people • Evidence from occupational choices suggests that people are willing to pay roughly $500 to reduce their annual probability of death by about 1/10,000 • This translates into a value of about $166,000 per additional year of life

  5. What we do not do • We do not measure the contribution of medical research to GDP – jobs etc. – these are costs not benefits • We do not measure the contribution of the increase in productivity from longer lives – people care about much more than productivity • We try to measure what health and longevity contribute to individual well being – this is what matters

  6. Basic Results • Historical improvements in life expectancy have been very significant – improvements in longevity from 1970 to 1998 were worth roughly $73 trillion (or about $2.6 trillion per year) • Improvements in life expectancy have contributed about as much to overall welfare as have improvements in material wealth

  7. Gains at The Individual Level

  8. Aggregate Gains ( Billions of $1996) 1970-1980 1980-1990 1990-1998 1970-1998 Males $21,215 $12,139 $13,223 $46,577 Females $15,863 $6,979 $3,461 $26,303 Total $37,078 $19,117 $16,685 $72,880 Aggregate Gains from Increased Longevity 1990-1998

  9. Basic Results (cont.) • Potential future gains are also very large: • Eliminating cancer is worth roughly $44 trillion • Eliminating cardiovascular disease is worth roughly $51 trillion • Even modest progress has great value: • 10% reduction in cancer deaths worth over $4 trillion • Historical reduction in heart disease from 1970 to 1998 was worth about $32 trillion

  10. Gain from a Permanent 10% Reduction in Death Rates by Category of Disease(Billions of $1996) Females Males Total ALL CAUSES $10,016 $7,147 $17,163 MAJOR CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES $2,994 $2,149 $5,142 DISEASES OF HEART $2,471 $1,614 $4,085 CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES $356 $399 $755 MALIGNANT NEOPLASMS $2,258 $2,101 $4,359 RESPIRATORY AND RELATED ORGANS $793 $516 $1,309 BREAST $3 $421 $424 GENITAL ORGANS AND URINARY ORGANS $271 $282 $553 DIGESTIVE ORGANS $538 $393 $931 INFECTIOUS DISEASES (Including AIDS) $498 $146 $644

  11. Gain from a Permanent 10% Reduction in Death Rates by Category of Disease(Billions of $1996) (Continued) Males Females Total

  12. Longer Term Changes • Recent improvements are reflective of longer term gains in longevity • Gains were actually somewhat greater in earlier decades using a fixed valuation profile (like fixed basis GNP accounting) • Gains have become increasingly concentrated at older ages in recent decades

  13. What About Health Expenditures?

  14. Caveats to the Net Gains Analysis • Gains include improvements from many margins not just health care • Health care costs include many expenditures other than those directed at longevity • However, the comparison allows us to compare the size of two important trends

  15. Implications of the Analysis • The economic value of disease reduction is increasing over time • The value of disease reduction is rising along with the level of overall wealth • The value of progress against any one disease rises as we make progress against other diseases • The value of disease reduction is increasing as the U.S. population ages • Appropriate efforts to control health care costs will increase the value of research

  16. Thinking More About Medical Research • Due to distortions in the market for medical care (third party payers etc.) increases in costs may exceed the benefits for some advances • These same distortions affect the composition of research and medical advances • Favors output enhancing over cost reducing innovations • Favors advances that can be patented over those that cannot • Funding for medical research and appropriate cost containment are complementary

  17. Thinking About Investments in Medical Technology • Growth in the market for health care • Market growth favors fixed cost technologies – drugs/ medical advances • Growth in the demand for health care is seen as a curse by most – but may be a relative gain to fixed cost technologies • Such technologies may be a key way to control the long-term growth in costs

  18. The Bottom Line • Past improvements in health and longevity have had enormous economic value • Potential gains from future reductions in mortality are also extremely large • The results presented today should lead us to revise our estimates of the value of research upward • Absent costs of treatment, very modest potential reductions in disease would justify significant expenditures on research. This leaves the cost of treatment as the open issue.

  19. THE END

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