UnnecessaryMedical Care Is More Common Than You Think
By Marshall Allen for ProPublica
It’s one of the
intractable financial boondoggles of the U.S. health care system: Lots and lots
of patients get lots and lots of tests and procedures that they don’t need.
Women still get annual
cervical cancer testing even when it’s recommended every three to five years for most
women.
Healthy patients are subjected to slates of unnecessary lab work before elective procedures.
Doctors routinely order annual electrocardiograms and other heart tests for people who don’t need them.
Healthy patients are subjected to slates of unnecessary lab work before elective procedures.
Doctors routinely order annual electrocardiograms and other heart tests for people who don’t need them.
That all adds up to a
substantial expense that helps drive up the cost of care for all of us. Just
how much, though, is seldom tallied.
So, the Washington Health Alliance, a nonprofit dedicated to making care safer and more affordable, decided to find out.
So, the Washington Health Alliance, a nonprofit dedicated to making care safer and more affordable, decided to find out.
The group scoured the
insurance claims from 1.3 million patients in Washington state who received one
of 47 tests or services that medical experts have flagged as overused or
unnecessary.
What they found should cause both doctors and their patients to rethink that next referral. In a single year:
What they found should cause both doctors and their patients to rethink that next referral. In a single year:
More than 600,000
patients underwent a treatment they didn’t need, treatments that collectively
cost an estimated $282 million.
Three of four annual
cervical cancer screenings were performed on women who had adequate prior
screenings — at a cost of $19 million.
About 85 percent of
the lab tests to prep healthy patients for low-risk surgery were unnecessary —
squandering about $86 million.
Needless annual heart
tests on low-risk patients consumed $40 million.
Susie Dade, deputy
director of the alliance and primary author of the report released Thursday, said almost half the
care examined was wasteful. Much of it comprised the sort of low-cost,
ubiquitous tests and treatments that don’t garner a second look.
But “little things add up,” she said. “It’s easy for a single doctor and patient to say, ‘Why not do this test? What difference does it make?’”
But “little things add up,” she said. “It’s easy for a single doctor and patient to say, ‘Why not do this test? What difference does it make?’”
ProPublica has spent
the past year examining how the American health care system squanders money—
often in ways that are overlooked by providers and patients alike. The waste is
widespread — estimated at $765 billion a year by the National Academy of
Medicine, about a fourth of all the money spent each year on health care.
The waste contributes
to health care costs that have outpaced inflation for decades, making patients
and employers desperate for relief. This week Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway and
JPMorgan rattled the industry by pledging to create their own venture to lower
their health care costs.
Wasted spending isn’t
hard to find once researchers — and reporters — look for it. An analysis in Virginia identified $586 million in
wasted spending in a single year. Minnesota looked at fewer treatments and found
about $55 million in unnecessary spending.
Dr. H. Gilbert Welch,
a professor at The Dartmouth Institute who writes books about overuse, said the
findings come back to “Economics 101.” The medical system is still dominated by
a payment system that pays providers for doing tests and procedures.
“Incentives matter,” Welch said. “As long as people are paid more to do more
they will tend to do too much.”
Dade said the medical
community’s pledge to “Do no harm” should also cover saddling patients with
medical bills they can’t pay. “Doing things that are unnecessary and then
sending patients big bills is financial harm,” she said.
Officials from
Washington’s hospital and medical associations didn’t quibble with the alliance’s
findings, calling them an important step in reducing the money wasted by the
medical system. But they said patients bear some responsibility for wasteful
treatment.
Patients often insist that a medical provider “do something,” like write a prescription or perform a test. That mindset has contributed to problems like the overuse of antibiotics — one of the items examined in the study.
Patients often insist that a medical provider “do something,” like write a prescription or perform a test. That mindset has contributed to problems like the overuse of antibiotics — one of the items examined in the study.
And, the report may
help change assumptions made by providers and patients that lead to unnecessary
care, said Jennifer Graves, vice president for patient safety at the Washington
State Hospital Association.
Often a prescription or technology isn’t going to provide a simple cure, Graves said. “Watching and waiting” might be a better approach, she said.
Often a prescription or technology isn’t going to provide a simple cure, Graves said. “Watching and waiting” might be a better approach, she said.
To identify waste, the
alliance study ran commercial insurance claims through a software tool called
the Milliman MedInsight Health Waste Calculator. The services were provided
during a one-year period starting in mid-2015.
The claims were for tests and treatments identified as frequently overused by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation’s Choosing Wisely campaign. The tool categorized the services one of three ways: necessary, likely wasteful or wasteful.
The claims were for tests and treatments identified as frequently overused by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation’s Choosing Wisely campaign. The tool categorized the services one of three ways: necessary, likely wasteful or wasteful.
The report’s “call to
action” said overuse must become a focus of “honest discussions” about the
value of health care. It also said the system needs to transition from paying
for the volume of services to paying for the value of what’s provided.
Marshall
Allen is a reporter at
ProPublica investigating the cost and quality of our health care.