PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Transforming America by redirecting wasted health care dollars

Eliminating excessive spending could mean windfall for US, study suggests

2012-10-30
(Press-News.org) The respected national Institute of Medicine estimates that $750 billion is lost each year to wasteful or excessive health care spending. This sum includes excess administrative costs, inflated prices, unnecessary services and fraud — dollars that add no value to health and well-being.

If those wasteful costs could be corralled without sacrificing health care quality, how might that money be better spent?

In a study published in the current online edition of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, Frederick J. Zimmerman, professor and chair of the department of health policy and Management at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, and colleagues outline some of the myriad ways that $750 billion could benefit Americans.

"If cut from current health care expenditures, these funds could provide businesses and households with a huge windfall, with enough money left over to fund deficit reduction on the order of the most ambitious plans in Washington," Zimmerman said. "The money could also cover needed investments in transportation infrastructure, early childhood education, human capital programs, rural development, job retraining programs and much more. And it could transform America with little to no reduction in the quality of, or access to, health care actually provided."

Zimmerman noted that while different observers would likely have different priorities regarding the alternative uses toward which the wasted expenditures could be directed, all would agree that the alternatives proposed in this study have inherent social value.

"When the fastest-growing part of the economy is also the least efficient, the economy as a whole loses its ability over time to support our current living standards," said Jonathan Fielding, a UCLA professor of health policy and management and director of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, who is a co-author of the study. "The U.S. has become irrationally attached to its inefficient health care system. Recognizing the opportunity costs of this attachment is the first step in repairing the system."

In the study, the research group, which also included Dr. Steven Teutsch, chief science officer of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, and first author Jeffrey C. McCullough, a graduate student at the UCLA Fielding School, presented one scenario of how that money could be used.

For one, the authors propose that more than $410 billion per year — or 55 percent of the savings — could be returned to the private sector for individuals and companies to use as they please; another $202 billion (27percent) could go toward deficit reduction, yielding a greater reduction than the congressional "super committee" sought and failed to achieve. An additional $104 billion (14 percent) could support additional investments in human capital and physical infrastructure.

"For example," Zimmerman said, "the Head Start program could be doubled in size, universal preschool could be provided, average class size could be reduced from 22 to 13 students. And trained nurses could conduct regular home visits for high-risk pregnancies."

Two percent of the savings, amounting to $18 billion, could promote urban and rural quality of life by improving the built environment surrounding schools, expanding and modernizing public libraries, improving wastewater treatment and providing rural development grants to every small town in the nation. Job-training opportunities would be affordable for nearly 50,000 unemployed persons. And under the research group's scenario, the remaining 2 percent of the savings would be devoted to fully funding an extensive wish list of transportation projects to alleviate road congestion and promote mass transit alternatives.

Freeing up this money would be no easy task, Fielding warned. These excess expenditures will be difficult to reduce because the costs are spread across many groups, and the financial beneficiaries are coordinated, clear-minded and powerful, he said. Overcoming this resistance will require concerted collective action on the part of many economic sectors, governmental agencies and other organizations that are not used to seeing themselves as sharing interests with the others.

But whatever one's values and preferences, said Zimmerman, "eliminating excess medical care costs provides a monumental opportunity to reallocate those resources to strengthen our international competitiveness, enhance our well-being and build a healthier nation."

The result of redirecting some $750 billion per year, he said, could be transformative for Americans, and the potential uses for these funds are panoramic in both scope and possibility.

"This will not be an easy fight," Zimmerman said. "But we believe reconceptualizing our excess health care spending by looking at its opportunity cost to society is an important first step."

### A video of the group's research is available online at www.ajpmonline.org/content/video_pubcasts_collection .

This research was not supported by external grants or funding. The authors report no conflict of interest.

The UCLA Fielding School of Public Health is dedicated to enhancing the public's health by conducting innovative research; training future leaders and health professionals; translating research into policy and practice; and serving local, national and international communities.

For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How silver turns people blue

2012-10-30
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Researchers from Brown University have shown for the first time how ingesting too much silver can cause argyria, a rare condition in which patients' skin turns a striking shade of grayish blue. "It's the first conceptual model giving the whole picture of how one develops this condition," said Robert Hurt, professor of engineering at Brown and part of the research team. "What's interesting here is that the particles someone ingests aren't the particles that ultimately cause the disorder." Scientists have known for years argyria had ...

Risk factors predict childhood obesity, researchers find

2012-10-30
High birth weight, rapid weight gain and having an overweight mother who smokes can all increase the risk of a baby becoming obese later in childhood, research by experts at The University of Nottingham has found. The study, published in the latest edition of the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood, also discovered that children who were breastfed and were introduced to solid food later had a slightly reduced chance of becoming overweight. The findings come following a systematic review and analysis of data from around 30 previous studies looking at the impact ...

BMJ editor urges Roche to fulfil promise to release Tamiflu trial data

2012-10-30
In an open letter to company director, Professor Sir John Bell, she says: "Billions of pounds of public money have been spent on [Tamiflu] and yet the evidence on its effectiveness and safety remains hidden from appropriate and necessary independent scrutiny." The letter is published on the BMJ's website (bmj.com/tamiflu ) alongside correspondence by the Cochrane team with Roche, the US Centres for Disease Control (CDC) and the World Health Organisation (WHO), as part of an open data campaign aimed at persuading Roche to give doctors and patients access to the full data ...

More than good vibes: Researchers propose the science behind mindfulness

More than good vibes: Researchers propose the science behind mindfulness
2012-10-30
BOSTON, MA—Achieving mindfulness through meditation has helped people maintain a healthy mind by quelling negative emotions and thoughts, such as desire, anger and anxiety, and encouraging more positive dispositions such as compassion, empathy and forgiveness. Those who have reaped the benefits of mindfulness know that it works. But how exactly does it work? Researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) have proposed a new model that shifts how we think about mindfulness. Rather than describing mindfulness as a single dimension of cognition, the researchers demonstrate ...

Some cancer survivors reported poor health-related quality of life years after diagnosis

2012-10-30
PHILADELPHIA — Survivors of many common cancers enjoy a mental and physical health-related quality of life equal to that of adults who have not had cancer, but survivors of other cancers are in poorer health, according to results published in Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. "We did not have a good sense of how cancer survivors across the United States were faring after their cancer diagnosis and immediate treatment," said Kathryn E. Weaver, Ph.D., M.P.H., assistant professor at Wake Forest Baptist ...

Mastering weight-maintenance skills before embarking on diet helps women avoid backsliding

2012-10-30
STANFORD, Calif. — Would you take part in a weight-loss program in which you were explicitly asked not to lose any weight for the first eight weeks? Although the approach sounds counterintuitive, a study from researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine found that women who spent eight weeks mastering weight-maintenance skills before embarking on a weight-loss program shed the same number of pounds as women who started a weight-loss program immediately. More importantly, the study showed that the "maintenance-first" women had regained only 3 pounds on average ...

Many cancer survivors face health-related quality of life issues

2012-10-30
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Oct. 30, 2012 – Beating cancer is just the first step. More than one third of the 12.6 million cancer survivors in the United States have physical or mental problems that put their overall health in jeopardy, according to researchers at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. Their study, published in the October issue of the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention, found that 25 percent of cancer survivors reported poor physical health and 10 percent reported poor mental health as compared to 10 percent and 6 percent, respectively, of adults ...

Distinct developmental patterns identified in children with autism during their first 3 years

2012-10-30
In the largest prospective study to date of children with early and later manifestation of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) compared to children without ASD, researchers found two distinct patterns of language, social and motor development in the children with ASD. Published in the journal Child Development, the study found that early in development, children who display early signs of ASD show greater initial delay across multiple aspects of development compared to children whose ASD symptoms emerge later. However at 36 months of age, the early differences between these ...

Milton Collier NEW Book! Good Economy and Bad Economy - The Right Career

2012-10-30
No matter what the economy is doing at any given time, goods must be transported to consumers. These factors may be a good reason to take a look at the Transportation Industry. The book Good Economy and Bad Economy, The Right Career, demonstrates that transportation professionals can leverage their experience to enter many fields in the industry. Milton Collier, the author is the President of TranZcenter, LLC (http://www.TranZcenter.com) retired military veteran with over 25 years or experience in the Transportation Industry. The book is current sold on Amazon at (https://www.createspace.com/3792235) ...

Annals of Internal Medicine tip sheet for Oct. 30, 2012

2012-10-30
Health care expenditures are projected to reach almost 20 percent of the United States' GDP by 2020. Many economists consider this spending rate unsustainable. Up to 30 percent, or $765 billion, of health care costs were identified as potentially avoidable -- with many of these costs attributed to inappropriate or unnecessary services. Evidence-based performance measures for low-value tests and treatments can be one of the ways to help physicians to provide high value care to their patients, according to the American College of Physicians (ACP) in a new policy paper published ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Truly autonomous AI is on the horizon

California’s marine protected areas boost fish populations across the state

Poachers’ social media posts reveal alarming extent of illegal wildlife hunting in Lebanon

Examining the potential environmental effects of mining the world’s largest lithium deposit

Chicken ‘woody breast’ detection improved with advanced machine learning model

Around 1 in 5 UK medical students considers dropping out, study suggests

Poor childhood social and cognitive skills combo linked to teens’ poor exam results

Position menstrual cups carefully to avoid possible kidney problems, doctors urge

Yale scientists recode the genome for programmable synthetic proteins

MiR-128-3p mediates MRP2 internalization in estrogen-induced cholestasis through targeting PDZK1

Bleeding risk with apixaban and dabigatran similar to aspirin

MD Anderson Research Highlights for February 10, 2025

Ready (or not) for love? Your friends likely agree

Health care students and clinicians support integrated care education

Scientists from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution identify heat-resistant kelp strain

Rice-BCM research enables detection of hazardous chemicals in human placenta with unprecedented speed and precision

Researchers are driving the charge of zero emissions

USC-led study finds potential new drug target for Alzheimer’s disease

Why you need to subscribe to NFCR’s new podcast, “All Things Cancer”

Research pinpoints weakness in lung cancer’s defenses

New study highlights healthcare utilization shifts among Long COVID patients in Colorado after diagnosis

Majority of kids who die in mass shootings killed by family members, Stanford Medicine-led study shows

How perception may shape health safety-related assessments

Potential new strategy for relieving anxiety

Scientists develop corrosion-induced electrodes for biomass upgrading

Contemporary hormonal contraception and risk of venous thromboembolism

Victim-shooter relationships in mass shootings involving child victims

Health care company payouts favor shareholders, new research shows

Glucose-lowering medications and risk of COPD exacerbations in patients with type 2 diabetes

Low to moderate prenatal alcohol exposure and facial shape of children at ages 6 to 8

[Press-News.org] Transforming America by redirecting wasted health care dollars
Eliminating excessive spending could mean windfall for US, study suggests