No savings in preventive medicine: study

posted at 9:30 am on September 1, 2009 by Ed Morrissey

Barack Obama has insisted that his overhaul of the health-care system will pay for itself and save money, largely through bigger and supposedly more efficient preventive care.  His favorite example for this paradigm is diabetes, a disease that requires a lifetime of maintenance care, usually aggressively approached.  However, the National Diabetes Foundation’s new study on aggressive maintenance shows that, while the approach works well in controlling the disease, it does not save money except for the youngest of patients (emphasis mine):

Preventive services for the chronically ill may reduce health-care costs, but they are unlikely to generate the kind of fantastic savings that President Obama and other Democrats have said could help pay for an overhaul of the nation’s health system, according to a study being published Tuesday.

Using data from long-standing clinical trials, researchers projected the cost of caring for people with Type 2 diabetes as they progress from diagnosis to various complications and death. Enrolling federally-insured patients in a simple but aggressive program to control the disease would cost the government $1,024 per person per year — money that largely would be recovered after 25 years through lower spending on dialysis, kidney transplants, amputations and other forms of treatment, the study found.

However, except for the youngest diabetics, the additional services would add to overall health spending, not decrease it, the study shows.

“There’s no free lunch here. Prevention will not pay for everything. But it’s not as expensive as it looks at first blush,” said Michael J. O’Grady, a senior fellow at the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago, and one of four authors whose work is being published on the Web site of Health Affairs, a leading journal of health policy research.

But the argument wasn’t that adding services wouldn’t hike costs as much as some people imagined.  Obama argued that adding services would cut costs, making his new system less expensive, thanks to the savings of limiting expensive interventions later in life.  That’s simply not true, as even a simple analysis would have showed, because not all diabetics end up on dialysis machines or get amputations.  Diabetes can be managed by most diabetics well enough to avoid the most serious complications, although a small minority of Type 1 diabetics (my wife was among them) have inconsistent reactions to insulin; they’re called “brittle diabetics.”  Even aggressive management won’t hold off those complications.

Aggressive management works well for the patients, but it costs more.  There is no way around that fact.  If you access the medical care system more often, it drives up costs, in both the short- and long-term.

This should come as no surprise to anyone, least of all Congress.  Three weeks ago, the CBO told Congress the exact same thing, based on their own studies — and they had another point to explain as to why real prevention programs will always cost more than they save:

In making its estimates of the budgetary effects of expanded governmental support for preventive care, CBO takes into account any estimated savings that would result from greater use of such care as well as the estimated costs of that additional care. Although different types of preventive care have different effects on spending, the evidence suggests that for most preventive services, expanded utilization leads to higher, not lower, medical spending overall.

That result may seem counterintuitive. For example, many observers point to cases in which a simple medical test, if given early enough, can reveal a condition that is treatable at a fraction of the cost of treating that same illness after it has progressed. In such cases, an ounce of prevention improves health and reduces spending—for that individual. But when analyzing the effects of preventive care on total spending for health care, it is important to recognize that doctors do not know beforehand which patients are going to develop costly illnesses. To avert one case of acute illness, it is usually necessary to provide preventive care to many patients, most of whom would not have suffered that illness anyway. Even when the unit cost of a particular preventive service is low, costs can accumulate quickly when a large number of patients are treated preventively. Judging the overall effect on medical spending requires analysts to calculate not just the
savings from the relatively few individuals who would avoid more expensive treatment later, but also the costs for the many who would make greater use of preventive care. As a result, preventive care can have the largest benefits relative to costs when it is targeted at people who are most likely to suffer from a particular medical problem; however, such targeting can be difficult because preventive services are generally provided to patients who have the potential to contract a given disease but have not yet shown symptoms of having it.

The Obama argument on cost savings through preventive programs amounts to a shell game, a Ponzi scheme.  Any promised payoffs would come decades later, far too late to dump the system or recover the costs of adopting a national health-care system, while the government spends all of the money up front.  Obama’s conclusions fly in the face of common sense and now two studies showing the opposite conclusion.  The savings are as illusory as the White House’s initial deficit projections and promises of economic boom from their stimulus package.

Blowback

Note from Hot Air management: This section is for comments from Hot Air's community of registered readers. Please don't assume that Hot Air management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment just because we let it stand. A reminder: Anyone who fails to comply with our terms of use may lose their posting privilege.

Trackbacks/Pings

Trackback URL

Comments

Comment pages: 1 2

So to summarize, you guys are against preventive care even though it saves lives because you think it costs too much. Rationing much?

crr6 on September 1, 2009 at 12:49 PM

So to summarize, you guys are against preventive care even though it saves lives because you think it costs too much. Rationing much?

That’s idiotic. Nobody is against preventive care. the point is that Obama is trying to sell gov’t run health care on the idiotic idea that it would somehow be cheaper b/c of things like more preventive care.

Everyone knew it was a lie the first time he said it and here is further proof.

If you have to lie extensively to get a massive new program enacted, is it really a good idea?

Monkeytoe on September 1, 2009 at 1:06 PM

There’s an analogy here (potentially) between the War on Terror and public health. Equivalences can be drawn between the competing suggestions for protecting the homeland against “preventable” terror attacks, and protecting citizens against death from “preventable” illnesses. Under this analogy:

. Mandatory mass preventitive care, and continual monitoring for any signs of disease, is equivalent to mass mobilization of military, law enforcement and new armies of citizens to monitor all ports of entry for terrorists or signs of suspicious activity.

. The intrusion into our private lives necessitated by such an approach to the War on Terror is equivalent to the intrusion into our personal lives brought on by overzealous, a priori “preventitive” care and the personal liberties it needs to bend or break in order to show “success”.

. OTOH, reacting to health crises in the emergency room that could have been prevented by prior intervention is analogous to the homeland reacting to an attack such as 9/11 that was possible due largely to aspects inherent to our society such as the right to free assembly, travel, and access by foreigners to study/travel etc.

. And fighting the War on Terror overseas and vanquishing the terrorist enemy is tantamount to solving the underlying causes of the diseases in question so that they never have a chance to afflict us in the first place. Costs to distribute this new health benefit throughout the land will be orders of magnitude cheaper than whatever “preventitive” measures we might try to take now to seek out and combat disease at the point-of-care level in every hut and hamlet.

I guess this is just an observation that when we consider whether to spend massive amounts of money on point-of-service preventitive monitoring & screening, what we are really talking about is taking that money away from the fight to eliminate those chronic diseases at the source so they never have a chance to afflict us. Which do you think has a better chance of doing the greatest good for the greatest number?

There’s more than one valid opinion on this question, including the option of pursuing multiple approaches in parallel, but each one pretty much matches its counterpart on the War on Terror issue one-to-one.

P.S. Some might feel that “lifestyle-based” health problems do not & will never match the WoT analogy, but given what modern medicine may be able to accomplish in the long run, I disagree. Once there are clear remedies available for even these problems, choosing to ignore them becomes a personal choice that does not affect others (or reduces any health effects on others to negligible levels).

RD on September 1, 2009 at 1:30 PM

Even the President’s own Council of Bioethics agrees that preventive care is a hype and doesn’t save money – the Council that includes Ezekiel Emanuel and Daniel Foster, M.D. – a diabetes specialist…………

http://speakmymindblog.com/2009/08/18/preventive-care-hype-or-help/

sherryande on September 1, 2009 at 1:34 PM

If you have to lie extensively to get a massive new program enacted, is it really a good idea?
Monkeytoe on September 1, 2009 at 1:06 PM

That argument can be made both ways: if you must lie to kill a new program, is it really a bad idea? Examples: death panels, free health care to illegals, etc.

Constantine on September 1, 2009 at 1:57 PM

She is a planted troll, always “walking the line”, but is a liberal through and through. If she came out and was honest she would receive a drubbing, but she couches it with such “sincerity”. Yet her posts are riff with wrong facts (like people not getting health care), facts so easily disproved or research.
Either she is very, very dense (and I don’t think so), or is very,very liberal and tries to camouflage her liberalism.

Here’s what I think. Who cares?

You guys care more than even I care! LOL*

I just enjoy talking about the issues.

AnninCA on September 1, 2009 at 2:19 PM

That argument can be made both ways: if you must lie to kill a new program, is it really a bad idea? Examples: death panels, free health care to illegals, etc.

It’s like in the primaries. It’s been very hard for the public to fight past the extreme rhetoric and absurd argumentation.

Real people simply aren’t into this slicing and dicing type stuff.

And their disapproval of BOTH parties shows that.

We don’t like any of them, least of all the phony punditry and the crazy talk.

AnninCA on September 1, 2009 at 2:20 PM

If you have to lie extensively to get a massive new program enacted, is it really a good idea?
Monkeytoe on September 1, 2009 at 1:06 PM

Now, now, let’s be fair – Don’t the Statists Lie about pretty much Everything?

Yes they are Lying through their teeth, and yes it’s a really bad idea, but lying is all the Statists know how to do, it’s all they have.

Chainsaw56 on September 1, 2009 at 2:24 PM

Death panels – ie Rationing – people know there will be rationing under Kopechnekare .

Let’s get down to brass tacks – healthcare is always rationed – either by price or by bureaucrat.

It is much more preferable to have it rationed by price – at least you have some options – what options would have with the government? Sue them?

Chainsaw56 on September 1, 2009 at 2:40 PM

Let’s get down to brass tacks – healthcare is always rationed – either by price or by bureaucrat.

It is much more preferable to have it rationed by price – at least you have some options – what options would have with the government? Sue them?

That’s the best argument, really. The fact is that sometimes people DO need a bit of help in reining in “free enterprise.”

That’s where we’re at, in my mind. They went too far. And now, they really need their wings snipped.

AnninCA on September 1, 2009 at 2:44 PM

That argument can be made both ways: if you must lie to kill a new program, is it really a bad idea? Examples: death panels, free health care to illegals, etc.

Except of course, death panels and free health care to illegals are both true.

Death panels: the gov’t is going to have a “health choices czar” to decide who gets what care. The only way to keep costs down is to limit care to older people. I.e., someone deciding that grandma does not deserve care b/c she is no longer useful (in O!’s words, give her a pain pill, not a hip replacement). There is no way a rational, honest person can deny this.

Illegals – the dems voted against an amendment that did nothing more than state that illegals would be ineligible for the Obamacare. The bill itself does not have any enforcement mechanisms for keeping illegals off Obamacare. Why would they vote against that amendment unless they intended to cover illegals? Again, common sense dictates that the dems know that the bill as written will be interpreted to cover illegals, and don’t want anything in the bill to clarify that it does not cover illegals.

So, who is lying again?

Monkeytoe on September 1, 2009 at 3:16 PM

Chainsaw,

Let’s get down to brass tacks – healthcare is always rationed – either by price or by bureaucrat.

It is much more preferable to have it rationed by price – at least you have some options – what options would have with the government? Sue them?

Everything is rationed. I’d love to have a porsche, but it is rationed to only those who can afford it. I’d love to go on a 6 month around-the-world cruise, but again, it is rationed.

I’d love to have 5 42″ plasma televisions in my house, but again, rationing.

I’d love to eat a prime cut porterhouse steak every night, but again, rationing.

The real question is whether or not treatment by a doctor or hospital is an inalienable right. How can anything that requires other people to a) get an education and b) work long hours to provide to you be an inalienable right?

It’s like the 2nd amendment. We have a right to keep and bare arms. It is explicitly stated in the Constitution (unlike abortion or health care). Yet, that does not mean the gov’t has to buy us all the guns of our choice. That would be idiotic. The idea that gov’t must PROVIDE health care is also idiotic.

Monkeytoe on September 1, 2009 at 3:20 PM

AnninCA on September 1, 2009 at 2:44 PM

I’m not sure if you understand my point.

-which was originally made by George Will a few weeks ago -
In the real world everything is in limited supply, and that it’s better to have free enterprise distribute limited resources than to have the government do it.

Part of the problem with government doing it is that you have no recourse if the government bureaucrat says no.

Well you could go across the border to another country like the Canadians, but where would we go?

Chainsaw56 on September 1, 2009 at 3:23 PM

If you told me that the gov’t does not have the right to deny people the opportunity to obtain healthcare, I’d be right there agreeing.

Claiming the gov’t must provide everyone with healthcare is a much, much different thing.

Rights are things the gov’t can’t take away. Entitlements are things the gov’t must give. There are no entitlements in the constitutions. All entitlements are statutory and thus can be stopped at any time by the gov’t.

Healthcare is not a “right” and never will be.

Monkeytoe on September 1, 2009 at 3:23 PM

It’s like the 2nd amendment. We have a right to keep and bare arms. It is explicitly stated in the Constitution (unlike abortion or health care). Yet, that does not mean the gov’t has to buy us all the guns of our choice. That would be idiotic. The idea that gov’t must PROVIDE health care is also idiotic.
Monkeytoe on September 1, 2009 at 3:20 PM

You said that better than I did.

Oh, and if the government is going to buy guns for everybody, I’d like a Ruger SR-556 please.

Thank you very much.

If you told me that the gov’t does not have the right to deny people the opportunity to obtain healthcare, I’d be right there agreeing.
Claiming the gov’t must provide everyone with healthcare is a much, much different thing.

Rights are things the gov’t can’t take away. Entitlements are things the gov’t must give.

Monkeytoe on September 1, 2009 at 3:23 PM

Another excellent point.

Chainsaw56 on September 1, 2009 at 3:31 PM

So to summarize, you guys are against preventive care even though it saves lives because you think it costs too much. Rationing much?

crr6 on September 1, 2009 at 12:49 PM

Who’s against preventive care? I’m against paying for YOUR care, preventive or otherwise. It’s the difference between being in favor of self-defense, and being in favor of buying everyone an F-15. The government cannot afford to buy urgent care for everyone, much less preventive care. See: any government health program you care to observe. The Vets Admin. Medicare. Medicaid. The Indian Health System. Any foreign health care system.

hawksruleva on September 1, 2009 at 3:48 PM

That argument can be made both ways: if you must lie to kill a new program, is it really a bad idea? Examples: death panels, free health care to illegals, etc.

Constantine on September 1, 2009 at 1:57 PM

The Congressional Research Service has found that the second of your statements is true, not a lie. It was on Hotair last week.

hawksruleva on September 1, 2009 at 3:52 PM

Destroying perfectly good cars! How does that make sense to anyone?

Esthier on September 1, 2009 at 11:20 AM

Ah, there’s the problem. You see, under NewThink, these are not perfectly good cars. These are evil cars, cars that are in the process of drowning polar bears as we speak and driving us down the road (see what I did there?) to Armageddon where coastlines will be wrecked and many major population centers of the world will be flooded due to ice in Antarctica and in Greenland melting. It’ll be Katrina times a bajillion!

ManBearPig said so, and the time for discussion is over, because there’s a consensus.

Therefore, the only responsible thing to do is to incentivize people to bring in these monstrosities so that they can be destroyed and the world can be rid of the evil that they each do.

They’re perfectly evil cars, and it is our duty to ensure that no one ever drives them again.

VekTor on September 1, 2009 at 5:00 PM

Comment pages: 1 2