Literature DB >> 31905376

Health Care Administrative Costs in the United States and Canada, 2017.

David U Himmelstein1, Terry Campbell2, Steffie Woolhandler1.   

Abstract

Background: Before Canada's single-payer reform, its payment system, health costs, and number of health administrative personnel per capita resembled those of the United States. By 1999, administration accounted for 31% of U.S. health expenditures versus 16.7% in Canada. No recent comprehensive analyses of those costs are available. Objective: To quantify 2017 spending for administration by insurers and providers. Design: Analyses of government reports, accounting data that providers file with regulators, surveys of physicians, and census-collected data on employment in health care. Setting: United States and Canada. Measurements: Insurance overhead; administrative expenditures of hospitals, physicians, nursing homes, home care agencies, and hospices.
Results: U.S. insurers and providers spent $812 billion on administration, amounting to $2497 per capita (34.2% of national health expenditures) versus $551 per capita (17.0%) in Canada: $844 versus $146 on insurers' overhead; $933 versus $196 for hospital administration; $255 versus $123 for nursing home, home care, and hospice administration; and $465 versus $87 for physicians' insurance-related costs. Of the 3.2-percentage point increase in administration's share of U.S. health expenditures since 1999, 2.4 percentage points was due to growth in private insurers' overhead, mostly because of high overhead in their Medicare and Medicaid managed-care plans. Limitations: Estimates exclude dentists, pharmacies, and some other providers; accounting categories for the 2 countries differ somewhat; and methodological changes probably resulted in an underestimate of administrative cost growth since 1999.
Conclusion: The gap in health administrative spending between the United States and Canada is large and widening, and it apparently reflects the inefficiencies of the U.S. private insurance-based, multipayer system. The prices that U.S. medical providers charge incorporate a hidden surcharge to cover their costly administrative burden. Primary Funding Source: None.

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 31905376     DOI: 10.7326/M19-2818

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-4819            Impact factor:   25.391


  13 in total

1.  Single-Payer Reform: Heed the Evidence, Not the Soothsayers.

Authors:  David U Himmelstein; Steffie Woolhandler
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Estimating the costs of physician turnover in hospital medicine.

Authors:  Matthew A Pappas; James K Stoller; Victoria Shaker; James Houser; Anita D Misra-Hebert; Michael B Rothberg
Journal:  J Hosp Med       Date:  2022-08-17       Impact factor: 2.899

3.  Patient administrative burden in the US health care system.

Authors:  Michael Anne Kyle; Austin B Frakt
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2021-09-08       Impact factor: 3.734

4.  Neural Machine Translation-Based Automated Current Procedural Terminology Classification System Using Procedure Text: Development and Validation Study.

Authors:  Hyeon Joo; Michael Burns; Sai Saradha Kalidaikurichi Lakshmanan; Yaokun Hu; V G Vinod Vydiswaran
Journal:  JMIR Form Res       Date:  2021-05-26

Review 5.  Getting to 100%: Research Priorities and Unanswered Questions to Inform the US Debate on Universal Health Insurance Coverage.

Authors:  Peter Cram; Harry Selker; Jennifer Carnahan; Santiago Romero-Brufau; Michael A Fischer
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2022-01-21       Impact factor: 5.128

6.  Inequity in insurance coverage for prescription drugs in New Brunswick, Canada.

Authors:  Busola Ayodele; Elaine Xiaoyu Guo; Arthur Sweetman; G Emmanuel Guindon
Journal:  Can J Public Health       Date:  2022-04-29

7.  Understanding Patient- and Hospital-Level Factors Leading to Differences, and Disparities, in Critical Care.

Authors:  Ayah Nayfeh; Robert A Fowler
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2020-03-15       Impact factor: 21.405

8.  SGIM's Endorsement of ACP's Better Is Possible: Aligning Policy with Values.

Authors:  Christopher J Wong; Steffie Woolhandler; David U Himmelstein; Danny McCormick
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2020-10-26       Impact factor: 5.128

9.  Mortality in the USA, the UK and Other Western Countries, 1989-2015: What Is Wrong With the US?

Authors:  Colin Pritchard; Sam Porters; Emily Rosenorn-Lanng; Richard Williams
Journal:  Int J Health Serv       Date:  2020-10-15       Impact factor: 1.663

10.  Cost-Benefit Analysis of the COPE Program for Persons Living With Dementia: Toward a Payment Model.

Authors:  Laura T Pizzi; Eric Jutkowitz; Katherine M Prioli; Ember Yiwei Lu; Zachary Babcock; Heather McAbee-Sevick; Dorothy B Wakefield; Julie Robison; Sheila Molony; Catherine V Piersol; Laura N Gitlin; Richard H Fortinsky
Journal:  Innov Aging       Date:  2021-10-16
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.