New Jersey Leaders Detail Savings for Health Reform
Former Governor
“The savings are there,” said former
A former member of Congress, Florio said “The Leadership in the House and the Senate must insist that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) provides Members with all the information they need to make informed fiscal decisions on health reform. That should include an honest analysis of the savings chronic disease prevention can realize, not just in the next few years, but in the next few decades as well.”
Governor Florio made it clear on behalf of the Partnership that they were not endorsing any particular reform measure and that the PFCD has not taken a position on many of its components, including whether there should be a public plan or the taxing of health benefits.
“There is enough disagreement to go around when it comes to health reform,” Florio said. “But when it comes to a commitment to fight chronic disease, we all agree.”
“If Congress and the President do the right thing and create a real health care system to replace the ‘sick care’ system we now have in place, the savings will come,” said
The group outlined the costs and savings potential from chronic disease prevention and management:
Seventy-five cents of every dollar spent on health care is for patients with chronic illnesses like diabetes, heart disease, cancer and asthma — many cases that could have been prevented entirely, detected earlier, or better managed. In Medicaid and Medicare, the numbers are worse — 83 and96 cents respectively.$1.7 trillion of health care spending annually is associated with chronic illnesses, which also costthe United States $1 trillion in lost productivity every year.- Medical bills contribute to more than 60 percent of U.S. personal bankruptcies. Three-quarters of these bankrupt families had health insurance, but were still overwhelmed by medical debt.
- 30% of the increase in health spending since 1987 is due to doubling of the rate of obesity during that time.
- Two-thirds of spending over the past 25 years is attributable to the rise in rates of treated chronic disease.
- In
New Jersey , roughly$7.5 billion is spent every year on the seven most common chronic diseases alone.
The Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease has been urging national leaders to realign incentives in the health care system to encourage chronic-disease prevention and management, provide incentives for health care quality improvements, eliminate health disparities, promote community health intervention and translate “best practices” research into action.
New Jersey State Chamber President
“In these tough economic times, the business community knows full well the value of keeping its employees healthy and on the job,” said
Some of those programs were outlined by
Mr. Knowlton explained, “Right now the incentive schemes and reimbursement mechanisms for health insurance are backwards for patients and providers alike. Patients are often fully reimbursed for treatment of acute manifestation of illness but they are forced to pay out of pocket for counseling on lifestyle modifications and medications that can prevent such problems. Doctors are reimbursed for providing a treatment, but not for simple counseling about how to prevent a condition from developing or worsening. Reform should transform that backwards system and Congress should take the credit for the savings.”
A list of many of the “Promising Practices” programs in place in
http://promisingpractices.fightchronicdisease.org/programs/state/new_jersey
The Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease (PFCD) is a national bipartisan coalition of patients, providers, community organizations, business and labor groups, and health policy experts committed to raising awareness of the number one cause of death, disability, and rising health care costs in the U.S.: chronic disease whose mission is to:
- Challenge policymakers to make the issue of chronic disease a top priority and articulate how they will address the issue through their health care proposals
- Educate the public about chronic disease and potential solutions for individuals, communities, and the nation
- Mobilize Americans to call for change in how policymakers, governments, employers, health institutions, and other entities approach chronic disease
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SOURCE Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease
