Health Plans Prepare for Health Care Reform: Comparative Effectiveness, Consumerism Drive Future Changes, According to Deloitte Study
Posted on: Thursday, 4 June 2009, 08:30 CDT
During a time when the majority of U.S. consumers (84 percent) believe that the current economic conditions will make it harder for consumers to pay their medical bills, nearly 40 percent of consumers (70 percent of the uninsured) are already forgoing care when they are sick or injured, according to the Deloitte 2009 Survey of Health Care Consumers.
Recognizing the significance of health care reform required to fix the U.S. health care system, the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions profiled the comparative effectiveness systems of the
Deloitte examined three clinical examples of comparative effectiveness studies across the four countries' national programs. The three examples are diagnostic screening detection (colon cancer), a medication (the use of statins for treatment of elevated cholesterol) and a surgical procedure (treatment for benign prostatic hyperplasia).
"The results of our study demonstrate that, while the lessons from the other countries' approaches to comparative effectiveness are instructive, a cut-and-paste approach will not work in the United States," said
The study illustrates the complexity and usefulness of comparative effectiveness to identify the benefits and limitations that can help the U.S. health care system learn from the other systems as health care reform and comparative effectiveness programs are further developed and funded in
Findings from the report conclude:
- Although the current annual health care investment in
the United States is$2 trillion , less than 1 percent is invested in assessing the comparative effectiveness of available interventions. - The American Recovery and Reconstruction Act of 2009 allocated
$1.1 billion to comparative effectiveness research. - National governments in
Britain ,Canada ,Germany ,Australia ,France andthe Netherlands have responded with unique strategies to deal with evidence development in clinical and comparative effectiveness. Britain andAustralia have designed programs that are directly linked to decisions that determine national health benefits.Germany andCanada use the outcomes of their programs in an advisory capacity for national health benefit decisions.- Comparative effectiveness provides health plans a valuable framework for utilization review, provider profiling, safety and quality assessment and medical management. However, the willingness of health plans to collaborate on measures, reporting metrics and transparency programs will be important to optimize collaboration with providers.
- Statistical variation in actuarial models is likely to decrease as care becomes more standardized based on best practices discovered with comparative effectiveness. As variation decreases, risk margins charged to customers will likely reduce premiums.
- With the additional granularity that ICD-10 offers for comparative effectiveness research, its deeper refinement in defining diseases and conditions could potentially lead to more customized medical management programs.
"As the health plans sector prepares for health care reform, comparative effectiveness has the potential to fundamentally change the industry," said
Consumerism
Consumers, as the primary recipients of the product of the health care system, have an incredible stake in the effectiveness and efficiencies of health care services. Yet, data from the Deloitte 2009 Survey of U.S. Health Care Consumers indicates that only 27 percent of consumers report that they understand how the health system works, with 16 percent reporting that they have no understanding or very slight understanding. These findings underscore the significance of the potential gap regarding comparative effectiveness research findings and what consumers feel they know about how the health system works and how they view health system performance.
As comparative effectiveness programs are developed in
- Fifty-three percent are satisfied with their health plan -- an increase from 44 percent in 2008. Satisfaction is highest among enrollees in Medicare (70 percent) and military health programs (67 percent), lowest among individual policy holders (45 percent).
- Forty-six percent say they would recommend their health plan to others.
- Cost is the reason the uninsured lack coverage. Forty-five percent of the uninsured say it is too expensive to purchase health care coverage.
- Seventeen percent of insured consumers say they switched insurance companies or plans in the past year, an increase from 13 percent in 2008. Lower premiums and co-pays (29 percent) and job changes (25 percent) were major reasons for changes.
- Four in 10 say they would like to customize their insurance product by selecting benefits and features from a menu, knowing the cost would reflect what they choose; the desire to customize is higher among the uninsured (57 percent), lower among Medicare enrollees (36 percent).
- Customizable features that consumers consider most important include prescription coverage (81 percent), dental coverage (69 percent), waiver of referrals to specialists (67 percent) and pre-authorization (60 percent) and a wide provider network (60 percent).
- Familiarity with and the reputation of the insurance company is important to three in five consumers.
Related Content
Report: Comparative Effectiveness (www.deloitte.com/us/comparativeeffectivenessreport)
Report: Health Care Consumerism - Opportunities and Challenges for Health
Plans (www.deloitte.com/us/2009consumersurvey/healthplans)
Overview: Deloitte Center for Health Solutions (www.deloitte.com/us/healthsolutions)
Profile:
Profile:
About Deloitte
As used in this document, "Deloitte" means Deloitte LLP and Deloitte Services LP, a subsidiary of Deloitte LLP. Please see www.deloitte.com/us/about for a detailed description of the legal structure of Deloitte LLP and its subsidiaries.
Marykate Reese Sean Leous Public Relations Public Relations Deloitte Hill & Knowlton +1 203 257 0452 +1 917 715 3765 mareese@deloitte.com Sean.leous@hillandknowlton.comSOURCE Deloitte
Source: PR Newswire
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