Author:
Mitton Craig,Dionne Francois
Abstract
PurposeThe United States devotes a larger share of its GDP to health care and spends more on health care per capita than any other country. The sheer size of the total spending on health care, at approximately $3.5 trillion in 2017, puts significant pressure on all payers and crowds out other forms of public and private spending.Design/methodology/approachIn this brief commentary the authors suggest that, as part of the effort to deal with this pressure, the United States should look at borrowing a cost containment strategy from other countries: the use of hard caps on spending growth. The authors draw on our their experience of working with decision-makers over the last 20 years on the topic of priority setting to put forward some ideas on whether there is potential for application of trade-offs in the United States.FindingsAs hard caps force choices to be made, a necessary condition for successful implementation of this policy is the presence of an effective priority-setting framework to ensure that the right choices are made in operationalizing spending limitations. Work on this topic elsewhere can provide some insight into the use of a criteria-based framework for priority setting that purports transparency in decision-making to achieve value-based decisions.Originality/valueOther countries still have much work to do, but there is a substantial track record of using formal priority-setting approaches that could potentially inform practice in the United States. We suggest that there are key segments of the US healthcare system where the adoption of formal priority-setting frameworks to guide trade-off decisions is feasible. Piloting such activity in these contexts is the next natural step in this line of inquiry.
Subject
Health Policy,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)
Reference22 articles.
1. Berchick, E.R. and Barnett, J.C. (2018), Health Insurance Coverage in The United States: 2017, available at: https://www.census.gov/library/publications/2018/demo/p60-264.html (accessed 22 January 2020).
2. Real-world health care priority setting using explicit decision criteria: a systematic review of the literature;BMC Health Services Research,2015
3. Cost effectiveness analysis in health care: contraindications;British Medical Journal,2002
4. Government of Canada (2020), “Canada health transfer”, available at: https://www.fin.gc.ca/fedprov/cht-eng.asp (accessed 22 January 2020).
5. A perspective on the analysis of credible commitment and myopia in health sector decision making;Health Policy,2003