$700 Billion in Health Care Waste – and We’re Doing Zip About It

by Joe Flower on November 4, 2009

in Healthcare economics,Healthcare policy,Healthcare reform,Top healthcare stories

The future of health care in the United States cannot look good as long as we waste so much of what we spend. I have long cited studies showing that we waste 30%-40% of our health care dollar, and have long claimed that we could beat that and reduce our costs by 50%, cover everyone, and have better quality at the same time. Now Thomson Reuters health care analyst Robert Kelley has pulled together a plethora of substantial studies to produce a white paper headlined, "Where Can $700 Billion in Waste be Cut Annually From The U.S. Healthcare System?," detailing what various studies show about where the waste shows up.

He divides the waste into six categories:

  • Unnecessary care : 40% of the total waste ($250 – $325 billion in annual healthcare spending)
  • Fraud: 19% ($125 – $175 billion)
  • Administrative inefficiency: 17% ($100 – $150 billion)
  • Provider errors and inefficiencies: 12% ($75 – $100 billion)
  • Preventable conditions: 6% ($25 – $50 billion)
  • Lack of care coordination: 6% ($25 – $50 billion)

Meanwhile, the Washington Post publishes a roundup of health care experts seconding what I said two months ago: The bills before Congress are way too cautious about making the real changes that will truly cut health care costs to match the rhetoric about affordability. I warned about this in my post, "'Reform' means higher costs, not lower" and then proposed "Driving down the cost of health care: What would actually work?"

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