Context for This Session CHANGING THE PARADIGM FROM TREATMENT TO PREVENTION:

advertisement
Context for This Session
CHANGING THE PARADIGM FROM
TREATMENT TO PREVENTION:
A DIABETES CASE MODEL
CONTEXT
by
z
z
Diabetes is a serious and costly illness both in
human and economic terms.
z
z
The burden is expected to grow even more
substantial in the future.
z
z
The prevalence of diabetes and extent of
complications are to some extent preventable.
z
z
What are we learning about ways to shift the
paradigm? What stands in the way of greater
progress?
Marsha Gold, Sc.D.
Senior Fellow
Presentation
Presentation at
at the
the AcademyHealth
AcademyHealth National
National Health
Health Policy
Policy
Conference
Conference
February
February 4,
4, 2008
2008
1
Illustrating the Challenges from the 60,000
Foot Level: Federal Programs, Policy and
Spending Relevant to Diabetes
Acknowledgements and Caveats
z
z
The logic model
z
z
Work funded with support of Novo Nordisk’s
National Changing Diabetes Program
z
z
Federal department roles and responsibilities
relevant to diabetes
z
z
Large team of staff from MPR
z
z
Federal spending on treatment and disability
payments for those with diabetes (compared to
those without)
z
z
To “think big” we had to make simplifying
assumptions
z
z
z
z
Other relevant spending: prevention, research
and regulation, food assistance
Results likely to be “roughly right” in overview
but details may lack precision and
comprehensiveness.
2
3
Diabetes Contributes Substantially to
Federal Costs
Diabetes Treatment Related Costs by
Agency
Additional Federal Spending on Medical Care for Those With Diabetes vs. Without, FY 2005
DOD
4%
z
z
z
z
$79.7 billion in extra federal medical spending
and $2.5 billion I SSDI/SSI disability payments
VA
7%
Other
<1%
FEHB
3%
Medicaid
(fed share)
6%
We estimated the extra medical spending is 12
percent of all federal health spending in FY 2005
(one in eight dollars)
Medicare
79%
Total federal program spending = $77.2 billion
Source: MPR analysis using cost of illness approach.
Note:
4
5
Excludes any spending on prevention and screening that is the same for those with and without
diabetes.
The Federal Case for a Reframed
Paradigm
z
z
Logic Model
Because of the epidemiology of diabetes, federal
programs (especially covering aged and
disabled) bear a disproportionate share of fiscal
burden of diabetes.
z
z
The federal government has many ways in which
programs can influence the development and
progression of diabetes.
z
z
However many activities go under-recognized
and uncoordinated. (e.g., CDC’s budget is only
11 percent of total relevant prevention funds.)
6
z
z
Primary focus is on people and the progression of
diabetes
z
z
Progression influenced by (1) individual
characteristics, (2) the broader social system in
which they reside (family, community, broader
environment), and (3) by health care system
characteristics
z
z
Prevention: central role of nutrition, physical
activity, and obesity for general and high risk groups
z
z
Screening to detect and treat diabetes early to
manage care and avoid complications
7
Federal Activity Relevant
to Diabetes - I
Logic Model - II
z
z
Ongoing treatment of diabetes and support for
people who have impaired functioning due to
diabetes
z
z
Individual, health system, and social/environmental
system variables influence success and ability to
avoid disability and other adverse outcomes
(including disability and death)
z
z
Programs that account for different subgroups of the
population at special risk
z
z
Context: overall policy and social environment, level
of knowledge (research/surveillance)
8
z
z
Prevention, Education and Assistance Programs:
Diabetes focused work concentrated in CDC, NIH, and
the Indian Health Service. Broader efforts at disease
prevention and health promotion are more widely
distributed (HHS, USDA, DOT, HUD, DOI, etc.) and not
specific to diabetes.
z
z
Medical Treatment and Disability Compensation:
Medicare, Medicaid/SCHIP, Veterans Health
Administration, DoD’s TRICARE, FEHBP, Indian Health
Service, Social Security Administration and others.
9
Federal Activity Relevant
to Diabetes - II
Distribution of Prevention Spending
Diabetes Specific
6%
z
z
Policy and Regulatory Authority: Dietary guidelines
(USDA/HHS); ERISA, Family and Medical Leave Act and
disability policy (DOL); health claims and advertising
(FTC); food and drugs (FDA); personal and business
income tax policy (IRS).
z
z
Research and Monitoring: NIH (various Institutes);
other HHS agencies, USDA, VA, and DoD; national data
systems (NCHS, AHRQ, Census Bureau, Labor and
others); and FDA and other regulatory efforts.
USDA
23%
Other
19%
a
CDC
11%
Other HHS
41%
Total = $3.9 billion, including $3.7 billion in other programs
related to physical activity, diet, and obesity.a
Source: MPR analysis of federal spending, FY 2005.
aIn addition, a portion of NIH’s $1.1 billion spending in diabetes research goes to support diabetes education and prevention. These funds
are included in other parts of the estimates.
10
11
$3.1 Billion in Federal Funds Supports
Research, Monitoring, and Regulation
Relevant to Diabetes
RESEARCH AND MONITORING (in billions)
$3.053
Research
$2.604
NIH diabetes related
researcha
Federal Spending on Food
Assistance Programs
z
z
About $48.9 billion is spent, mainly by USDA, on
food programs (in addition to nutrition guidance).
z
z
$16.5 billion is directly for food and $32.4 billion is
spent on food stamps.
z
z
Key programs include Food Stamps, WIC, Child
Nutrition Programs (e.g., School Meals), HHS’
Nutrition Services for Older Persons, and others.
$1.055
NIH research on related risk factors for diabetes
$0.814
Other relevant research in HHS (AHRQ, CMS, CDC)
$0.076
Other relevant research outside HHS (USDA, Other)
$0.659
Statistical Systems to Support Monitoring
$0.159
Related regulation (e.g., FDA, FTC, Commerce)
$0.290
Source: MPR analysis of federal spending, FY 2005.
aIncludes
NIH spending for diabetes education and prevention.
12
13
Opportunities at Multiple Points
Areas for Future Consideration
z
z
Integrate prevention and effective care into treatment
programs to reduce complications.
1.
1.
z
z
Leverage families, communities, schools, and the
workplace to encourage prevention, detection, and
early treatment of diabetes.
The federal government should take steps to get
the most out of current spending in medical and
treatment programs.
2.
2.
The federal government should lead by example
and effectively promote the health of its workforce.
3.
3.
The federal government should enhance
interdepartmental coordination and more
effectively apply its resources to reduce the risk
factors for and complications of diabetes within the
U.S. population.
z
z
z
z
Use existing federal funds in housing,
transportation, and other programs to build
environments that encourage physical activity.
Draw upon the large amount spent on food
assistance programs to promote healthy eating and
physical activity.
14
15
Logic Model for Diabetes
Presentation
Characteristics
Health Care System
Insurance Coverage
Access to Healthcare
Provider Supply and
Mix
Primary Care
Provider Knowledge
y
Policies regarding
Reimbursements/
Incentives
Federal and State Policies, Regulations, Surveillance, and Other Activities
(e.g., agriculture, transportation, etc.)
y
y
y
Diabetes Prevention
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
People
Age
Race/Ethnic Group
Immigration Status
SES/Insurance
Coverage
Family History
Obesity Status
Pregnancy Status
Nutrition
Physical Activity
Family/Community/
Built Environment
Community Wealth
Availabiilty of
Healthy, Culturally
Appropriate Food
Neighborhood
Walkability/Safety
Nutrition/Physical
Activity in Schools
Family Policy/
Support
Socialization of New
Immigrants
Transportation
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
Physician Incentives
Benefits for
Preventative Care
Reimbursement for
Obesity Counseling/
Treatment
Provider Education
Diabetes Prevention
Programs
Nutrition Programs
Physical Activity
Programs
Obesity Prevention
Programs
Screening/Counseling
Programs
Advertising/Health
Promotion
School Nutrition
Policies
Physical Activity
Programs in Schools
Nutrition Education/
Healthy Food in Food
Assistance Programs
Workplace Physical
Activity Promotion
Diabetes Detection
Diabetes Treatment
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
y
Physician Incentives
Reimbursement for
Screening
Provider Education
Clinical Guidelines
y
y
y
y
Screening and
Detection Programs
y
y
y
y
y
y
Community Health
Fairs
Workplace Screening
Programs
y
y
y
Management of
Diabetes with
Complications
Provider Education
Payment Policy
Subsidized Services
Chronic Care
Management
Clinical Guidelines
Differences in
Treatment by
Provider Type
Medication
Compliance
Self Monitoring
Physician Monitoring
Co-morbidities
Campaigns to
Reduce Stigma
Patient and Family
Empowerment
Policies
Workplace
Accomodations
Assistance from
Charitable
Organizations
y
Adverse Events
y
y
Disability
Death
y
Income and Disability
Policy
Where to get information:
http://www.mathematica-mpr.com/health/diabetes.asp
http://www.mathematica-mpr.com/health/diabetes.asp
Reports
Reports
z
z “Study
“Study of
of Federal
Federal Spending
Spending on
on Diabetes:
Diabetes: An
An Opportunity
Opportunity for
for Change”
Change”
(June
(June 2007)
2007)
z
z “Study
“Study of
of Federal
Federal Spending
Spending on
on Diabetes:
Diabetes: An
An Opportunity
Opportunity for
for
Change—Executive
Change—Executive Summary”
Summary” (June
(June 2007)
2007)
z
z “Study
“Study of
of Federal
Federal Spending
Spending on
on Diabetes:
Diabetes: An
An Opportunity
Opportunity for
for Change”
Change”
(PowerPoint
(PowerPoint presentation,
presentation, June
June 2007)
2007)
z
Study
of
Federal
Spending
on
Diabetes:
Summaries
of
Federal
z Study of Federal Spending on Diabetes: Summaries of Federal
Government
Government Agencies
Agencies and
and Their
Their Relevant
Relevant Activities.
Activities. Working
Working Papers”
Papers”
(January
(January 2007)
2007)
White
White Paper
Paper
z
z
Research on Effective Interventions within Settings and Populations
Source: Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
16
17
“Federal
“Federal Medical
Medical and
and Disability
Disability Program
Program Costs
Costs Associated
Associated with
with
Diabetes,
Diabetes, 2005”
2005” (September
(September 2007):
2007): Provides
Provides aa focused
focused looked
looked at
at the
the
construction
construction of
of the
the $79
$79 billion
billion estimates
estimates of
of medical
medical and
and disability
disability
costs
costs that
that were
were included
included in
in the
the main
main study.
study.
Download