The Mercury News

Study may point to better strategies to cut wasteful medical spending

- By Austin Frakt

Research has establishe­d that as much as a quarter of American health spending is waste.

There are two basic ways of tackling it, by focusing narrowly on specific types of patients or on the system as a whole. The patient-centered approach starts with this fact: A relatively small group of patients — 5% — account for half of all health spending.

It’s widely believed that making so-called super-utilizers even a little healthier — for example, giving them extra help once they’re out of the hospital to prevent a quick return there — would yield substantia­l savings. This idea, based on some weak evidence, has received considerab­le media attention and government support.

A rigorous study, published Wednesday, makes clear it’s not so easy. In fact, the study’s results are likely to be viewed by many as a major disappoint­ment. Yet they also help guide us to what may be better strategies for cutting waste.

The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine,

was a big test of the people-focused approach: a randomized trial of a program in Camden, New Jersey, to reduce super-utilizer spending. About 800 very sick patients were randomly assigned into the program or to usual care. (The program has since expanded to other cities.)

To try to avoid a repeat hospitaliz­ation, the program provided an unusually large amount of care to very sick patients after they left the hospital, including from registered nurses, social workers, licensed

practical nurses, community health workers and health coaches.

In the three months after a hospital stay, an average patient in the program received 7.6 home visits and 8.8 phone calls from staff. In addition, program staff went along on physicians’ visits to patients, which averaged 2.5 per person. The result of all this effort?

For the six months after randomizat­ion, patients in the treatment and control groups had about the same chance of returning to the hospital, the same number of return hospital visits, the same amount of time spent in the hospital overall, and the same hospital costs. (It’s possible these measures differed across groups in small ways the study wasn’t large enough to detect.)

That doesn’t mean it’s impossible to reduce readmissio­ns or health care spending of targeted patients. Some previous randomized evaluation­s of other programs have found reductions in hospital readmissio­ns of 15% to 45%, and in some cases reduced spending.

But it’s important to understand the difference between those studies and the Camden one.

“The Camden model targets a population that has a much more varied set of medical needs and social complexity, and with higher health care spending, than the existing successful models,” said Amy Finkelstei­n, a health economist at MIT and a co-author of the Camden study.

The other approach to fighting wasteful medical spending starts with looking at health care as a system of goods and services: medication­s and surgical procedures, administra­tive processes and physical infrastruc­ture. Some of these enhance health and others don’t, while some of it costs more than its benefits warrant. If you can identify wasteful goods and services and deliver effective care at lower prices, you can make the system more efficient for everyone.

This idea is behind many policies that change how Medicare pays for care.

One advantage of the systemic approach is that it’s easier to replicate than programs focused on super-utilizers. If eliminatin­g or replacing a drug, procedure or administra­tive process means that spending at a hospital goes down, it’s relatively simple to adopt that change at other hospitals. But conceptual­ly simple doesn’t mean easy in practice.

“Directly and systematic­ally reducing wasteful care is hard because the most successful strategies threaten the revenue of dominant health care providers,” said Michael Mcwilliams, a professor at Harvard Medical School and a general internist with Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “One person’s waste is another’s income.”

The Camden study, unfortunat­ely, did not measure patient experience, which might have improved. If patients did better in some ways and at no statistica­lly significan­t additional cost, that could make its efforts worthwhile, even costeffect­ive.

That’s what an exclusive focus on reducing spending misses. The answer isn’t necessaril­y to pick a patient- or system-focused approach to reforming health care, but to do both effectivel­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States