main healthcare problems in 1850-1900
- epidemics, not a public health issue. no understanding of how environment and living conditions can make you sick.
early beginnings of health insurance
first plan 1850:
1. Franklin health insurance company of Mass. : covered bodily injuries not resulting in death. Kinda like a travel insurance.
2. Traveler's Insurance: 1860 more like todays plan
3. Accident and Life Insurance companies: Late 1800's --> mostly covering loss of certain acute illnesses
Ross-Loos Group Practice, Los Angeles (1929)
another capitated methodology
- First MD sponsored health insurance plan with prepayment
- For water and power workers in LA
Hospital beginnings in early period:
- first hospitals:
- Almshouses and poorhouses of the 1700’s
- In miami, jackson is the public hospital
- Infirmaries: birthplace of public hospitals meant to
serve the poor
- Late 1800’s
- Hospital departments of the city poorhouses
- first public hospital
- pesthouses: think quarantining and providing healthcare
before they go out in the community
- Seaport towns
- Predecessors of the contagious disease and TB hospitals.
- few early hospitals:
- Community owned or voluntary hospitals. Roots in religious community.
- Funded by private donations and donations from local governments
- To support OB and surgery
- Admitted both poor and paying patients
- for contagious disease, mental illness: go to city, county, and eventually sate hospitals
Medical Science advancing in second period
- in like 1900-1940
- Water, sewage, food and milk urban housing quality all enhanced by 1900
- Plagues essentially eliminated
Influenza
- Virus
- Spreads through direct and indirect contact with respiratory secretions
- Epidemics and pandemics throughout history: annual epidemics (Flu), 3 pandemics in 20th cent., 1 pandemic in the 21st century.
- Minor antigenic changes in the virus result in antigenic drift (small changes in genetic makeup) and may lead to epidemic. Generally you can fight them off.
- Major changes result in antigenic shift and may lead to pandemic.
- Spread of Influenza around the world:
-
- First reports in 1918 in Kansas brought by troops in the eastern U.S.
- May and june 1918 epidemic in europe
- Summer 1918 reported in other places around the world
- August 1918: 2nd wave in U.S.: *more severe* and was known as the Spanish Flu
-
Healthcare management in U.S.
- public health issue on obesity:
- Direct costs of healthcare services = $152 billion spent on medical care per year
- Indirect costs= value of lost productivity + insurance premium and compensation + absence from work
- Cost of diabetes in U.S. in 2020= $327 billion
- public health issue on opioid crisis:
- Creation of “pill mills”
- Bad unintended consequences
Medical Schools in Second Period
- Before 1910: numerous medical school and no quality control
- Flexner Report (1910): medical education in the
U.S. and Canada for the Carnegie Foundation for Advancement in
Teaching
- Many medical schools closed
- Remaining affiliated with universities
- How to clean out medical education
- Universal hope
- Shift focus to acute illnesses and injuries of the INDIVIDUAL not the population
- Better surgical techniques: including antibiotic war drugs and insulin
- People live longer
Physician Practice in 1900-1940
- 1940 → 80% of trained MD’s were GP’s not specialists
- In early 1900’s, significant growth of group practices
- Early 1930’s about 150 medical group practices
Hospitals changing in 1900-1940
- Went from over 150 hospitals in 1873 to over 4k hospitals in 1909. Overall, big AF shift in the number of beds and hospitals.
- Today, there are 6,129 hospitals in the U.S.
- Change in concept:
- Hospital and social welfare facilities → institutions for medical science
- Charitable orgs → business
- Patrons and poor → professionals and patients
6 MAJOR CHANGES FROM 1800 TO EARLY 1900'S TO AFFECT HOSPITALS:
- Advances in medical science: greater efficacy and safety in hospitals
- Greater technology and specialization required greater institutionalization. Think about needing hospital settings for stuff like cochlear implants or PBB.
- Professional nursing
- Adding teaching and research to hospitals
- Growing health insurance
- Government controlling hospitals more
Advent of Managed Care and health insurance:
Western Clinic in Tacoma WA and Rural Farmers' Cooperative Health Plan
Western Clinic of Tacoma Washington (1910)
- For lumber mill owners and employees
- Assured income for the clinic
- Expanded to other sites
- Step 1) owners: maximize profits, produce lumber, workers→ health and uninjured, and family members healthy and uninjured. WIN!
- Step 2) workers: make money→ healthy and uninjured, and family → healthy and uninjured.WIN!
- Step 3) Dr. Bridge: pmpm
(revenue), capitated system, π= TR - TC
- Where TR= total revenue
- Where TC= total costs, which is prevention
- WIN!
- THIS IS THE CAPITATED MODEL:
“Capitation is a fixed amount of money per patient per unit of time
paid in advance to the physician for the delivery of health care
services.”
- A capitated system ensures and aims to promote protective practices
- Cons to this model: churning out fast
Rural Farmers' Cooperative plan:
a threat to the indemnity model:
- Oklahoma with Dr. Shadid
- Participating farmers purchases shares to raise K for hospitals
- Farmers got discounted care in return
- Political problems for Dr. Shadid: exempt from health insurance laws and ownership opportunities. Also, not being ethical at all has nothing to do with the practice.
- “Unethical” for doctor (self) and referred doctors
Indemnity model (FFS):
- Fee for service
- Aka sick model
- Want sick/injured people
Baylor Hospital (1929)
- Agreed to provide teachers prepaid care in its hospitals. Get $3 for coming in
- Origin of blue cross
- Expanded to more employees and more hospitals
Ross-Loos Group Practice, Los Angeles (1929)
another captivated methodology
- First MD sponsored health insurance plan with prepayment
- For water and power workers in LA
Kaiser Foundation Plan (1937)
another capitated methodology
- Initially for workers and families on construction sites
- From pre birth to death.
- Certain amount up front and they take care of you
Group Health Association-- GEHA (1937)
- Started in D.C. to reduce defaults due to large health bills
- Created a non-profit consumer coop
- Political problems
Birth of Blue Shield (1939)
- Made by california medical society
- To pay MD bills in hospital setting
Growing Social and Organizational Structures of Healthcare: THIRD PERIOD
1. growth of health insurance
2. feds more involved:
- Hill-Burton Act: 1946 paid for segregation
- Mental Retardation Facilities
- Higher NIH budget
- Medicare
and Medicaid (both in 1965)
- Medicare: people over 65 get healthcare
- Medicaid: medically poor because healthcare costs (part state and federally funded). Different state to state.
3. neighborhood health centers.
4. national health planning and resource development act
Due to WWII – Feds supported medical research
- Direct Result: antibiotics, trauma unit, better transport of sick and injured
- Hospitals changed to greater technology
- In 1940, 80% of MDs were GPs, post WW-II 80% of MD’s were specialists
- More time spent by MDs in hospitals, less in patients houses
- Growth in professional groups and accreditation process
- Technology growth with no evaluation of effectiveness
WWII changed view of health insurance:
- Active military receive health insurance
- Medical benefits seen for first time as right, not privilege
- Wage and price freezes caused firms to increase fringe benefits
- Unions
- Employer based health insurance tax exemption
- Overall, health insurance companies flourished
Evolutionary healthcare policy:
- First period: private
- Second period: local, city, county
- Third period: FEDS
- Fourth period: private employer
Medicare: 1865 for people over age of 65+
***
- Part A:
- In hospital (get automatically) insurance is social insurance
- Part B:
- Supplemental medical insurance – outpatient or ambulatory
- Not compulsory
- Not funded as a trust fund: comes from general treasury, and premiums deducted from monthly social security check
Medicaid: July 1965
- Title 19 of Social Security Act:
- Administered by HCFA
- Funded by Feds on average 55%
- 45% by state gov
- Used general treasury funds
- First federal programs for the poor
Significant post-1966 healthcare inflation measures by feds:
- Reasonable cost limits for hospitals
- Established state and local health planning agencies and CONs
- Established professional standard review organizations
Hospitals
- Mainly inpatient, AHA initiated hospital insurance cuz hospital care too costly and hospitals were closing
- Private insurance and medicare and medicaid covered more of the bill
- Coverage caused increased use rather than fewer cost alternatives
- Cost-plus reimbursement
- Hill Burton Act
- Significant proprietary nature
Third period academic medical centers
become increasing, more emphasis on clinical revenue, development of primary care networks.
Horizontal and Vertical Integration
- Horizontal: being at the same level of the supply chain. Merfers and acquisitions. Acquire a practice thats at the same level. If a hospital buys another thats still horizontal.
- Vertical: either up or down but sometimes productivity drops off. Ex: hospital sets up health insurance company, hospital buys medical practice, hospital buys nursing home.
- growing in 1960s and 1970s
- not for profit hospitals followed lead of proprietary hospitals
- very little financial benefit and/or efficiencies gained due to defensive nature of many mergers and acquisitions
- some recent divestiture -- but now a recent trend toward integration.
- vertical integration focus more a function of managed care
Ambulatory Surgery, Diagnostic and Emergency Centers
- Growth in hospital based centers
- First free standing ambulatory surgery center
- Initially outpatient basis
- Growth in mobile diagnostic and physician care vans
Nursing Homes
decreasing in numbers in the 2000’s. Due to medicare and changing role of nursing homes
FOURTH PERIOD ISSUES: Limited Resources
- Restriction of growth, changes in structure, pharma market changes
U.S. National Health Expenditure
- Price x quantity constant = Expenditure = PQ
- America
goes through second wave of managed care:
- HMO “Health
Maintenance Orgs”
- Uses a gatekeeper approach. Go through your PCP to get access to other specialists. Gatekeeper for other specialists.
- HMO “Health
Maintenance Orgs”
- in 1940, Health expenditure made up 4.5% of all spending. In 1980, health expenditure made up 19.5% of all spending.
- U.S. has the highest spending on healthcare around
the world
- U.S. 2X > canada
- U.S. 2.5X > UK
Source of problems for high healthcare spending:
aging of the population, tech advancements expensive, more services per person, increases in price a result of → increased demand and market control over price by medical care suppliers.
Value
Value = quality/ costs
- For any value of costs quality increases
- Value proposition:
U.S. poor healthcare outcomes from our system:
- Lower life expectancy compared to other countries
- High infant, neonatal, and maternal mortality rates
- High medical error little patient safety.
- Why?
- Medicaid coverage is up for the poor, private insurance coverage is down. Overall health coverage for the poor is down.
- Dental use lower
- Lower incidence of regular MD by minorities
- Minorities less likely to have preventive services provided
- Access problems has grown
- No increase in prenatal care utilization
- Low immunization rates
- Low income cannot regularly access MD’s so greater hospitalization
- Race issues related to access problems
- There is no system of healthcare!!!
Uninsured health care system
- Those younger than 35 have an uninsured rate of 21.4%
- Uninsured rate amongst women = 12.8%
System for Employed, Insured, Middle-Income America: Private Practice- Private Insurance:
- Gov involvement limited to public health
- Provision of services through private sector
- Shift to institutional care
- Third party insurance takes over
- Mental health rise: inpatient to outpatient → an emphasis on deinstitutionalization
A System for Unemployed, Uninsured, Inner-City, Minority America: Local Government Health Care
- People use city and county local services like hospitals
- Many don't have a family MD, use ER as an MD
- Use proprietary long term care facilities
- Mental health access through ER
- Many homeless people in the U.S. many of which have comorbidities
Issues with Qualifying for Medicare and Medicaid:
Medicaid: but very hard to get, varies from state to state, really only foe access to some type of care as a middle income, paperwork, moving to managed care
Medicare: age 65: shift to medicare
- deductible and copayment a barrier to access
Military Medical Care System
- All inclusive, highly preventative, medics provide lots of
care, hospitalization is robust
-
- Treats long term chronic
- A highly integrated system
- All healthcare employees salaries
- Dependents and families were combination of military and middle class system
-
- Military medical care programs
Veterans Health Administration
For retired or disabled veterans: mostly inpatient but also primary care, utilize private nursing homes
A Non-System: Not Integrated
- Each system must compete with other given limited resources
- Those with more power gain more
- Potential for significant duplication of services
FIFTH PERIOD advancements in medical care:
- Rational drug design
- Advanced imaging
- Minimally invasive surgery
- Genetic mapping
- Gene therapy
- Vaccines
- Artificial blood
- Xenotransplantation
- Digitalization
- Globalization and medical tourism1.
- Immunotherapy
- Stem cell research