Chattanooga Times Free Press

Cost of care for adults with hypertensi­on grows

- BY ELIZABETH FITE STAFF WRITER

Hypertensi­on, or high blood pressure, affects the health and wallets of more than 75 million U.S. adults, and the cost of managing this condition is growing, according to a new study from the Health Care Cost Institute.

The study released Tuesday analyzed data from employer-sponsored health insurance claims of adults between the ages of 18 and 65 and found that adults with hypertensi­on accounted for 40.8 percent of all health care spending.

On average, people with high blood pressure spent about three times more on health care than those without and about two times more out of pocket. Spending for those with hypertensi­on grew 18.3 percent from 2012 to 2016 to $14,399 a year, compared to a 14.3 percent increase to $4,596 a year for adults without.

“Hypertensi­on is one of

“Hypertensi­on is one of the most common chronic conditions in the U.S. and a contributo­r to two leading causes of death: heart attack and stroke.” – NIALL BRENNAN, HCCI PRESIDENT

the most common chronic conditions in the U.S. and a contributo­r to two leading causes of death: heart attack and stroke. It’s vital to understand the underlying drivers of spending and cost growth in this population,” HCCI President Niall Brennan said in a statement.

Alabama, Tennessee and Georgia rank among the top 10 states with the highest rates of hypertensi­on, causing concern among both medical profession­als and policy makers.

Arteries transport blood from the heart throughout the body, but sustained levels of high blood pressure within those artery walls can wreak havoc on blood vessels and the heart, often without showing symptoms.

Genetics and age may increase the risk of hypertensi­on, but it’s primarily caused by lifestyle factors such as stress, smoking, limited exercise, poor diet and alcohol. If healthy behavior changes don’t correct the problem, doctors may prescribe medication to lower blood pressure.

In the study, the fastest growing category of spending for people with hypertensi­on was prescripti­on drugs, which increased by 27.2 percent over the four-year period. This increase was mainly driven by purchasing of higher-priced, brandname drugs, although a growing portion of prescripti­on drugs used were lower-cost generics.

“Which drugs people were spending money on were actually slightly different than which drugs most were using,” said Bill Johnson, senior researcher at HCCI. “That suggests that those were sort of two separate trends.”

He said the report illustrate­s changes in the cost of health care for people with high blood pressure but doesn’t address why these trends occurred. Possible factors include a heightened awareness of hypertensi­on’s negative effects, more people seeking treatment, high costs of branded drugs and the availabili­ty of generic drugs.

The cost burden of hypertensi­on could be even higher, Johnson said, because new guidelines released in November lowered the threshold for high blood pressure diagnosis. Also, only 18 percent of the report’s sample were diagnosed with hypertensi­on, but according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, high blood pressure affects about a third of Americans.

“The percentage of spending that people with hypertensi­on account for within the entire United States is probably higher than 40 percent, especially because we only look at people with employer sponsored health insurance,” Johnson said. “We could be missing people that have hypertensi­on but it’s either undiagnose­d or they don’t get any health care services through their employer.”

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