I think I might have shown this before. It's spending on "healthcare," i.e. medical services and goods in the U.S., as a percent of GDP. It leveled off for a while after passage of the ACA, but it's going back up:
All that moolah isn't buying us better health though. We're spending twice as much as comparable countries and getting the least for it:
Naturally, all that cash is going mostly to one place: capitalists. Recent
decades have seen one overarching trend: consolidation of the medical industry into fewer and larger entities.
•Horizontal
consolidation: similar institutions merge into chains. Hospitals, primary care
practices, nursing homes, dialysis clinics, ambulatory surgery centers . . .
•Vertical
consolidation: various kinds of facilities are brought into the same firm, e.g.
hospital chains buying physician practices or nursing homes, or private equity
firms buying up medical facilities.
•Large
health insurers and private equity firms have also been buying physician
practices as an investment. Optum Health, a subsidiary of the giant
conglomerate UnitedHealth Group, now employs 8.4% of all practicing physicians
in the U.S. – 90,000.
•According
to an analysis in The Economist, 45% of medical spending in the U.S. goes to
just nine firms: insurers, drug distributors and pharmacy benefit managers.
•UnitedHealth
had revenues of $324 billion in 2022, second only to Walmart, and is now
America’s 12th most valuable company. CVS health
has ¼ of all pharmacy sales.
•Two
companies – DaVita and Fresenius – control 74% of the market for dialysis.
Then there's private equity. Unlike the enormous publicly traded companies listed above, private equity firms operate largely in secret. They have no pretense to
any mission other than making profit for their owners. They commonly seek
short-term profit for their investors by strategically purchasing practices
where they can gain market share and pricing power, cutting costs including
reducing the physician workforce and requiring remaining staff to provide a
higher volume of services, using their market power to raise prices, and
favoring higher margin procedures. They typically take on debt, using the acquired
property as collateral, putting it at risk for bankruptcy without any risk to
the buyers.
As of 2015, private equity
companies owned 9% of skilled nursing facilities – SNFs, commonly called
nursing homes. They probably own more today. According to a National Bureau of Economic
Research report, patient mortality is 10% higher during stays and 90 days
post-discharge at SNFs owned by private equity than at SNFs in general. Private equity acquisition
of hospitals has been found to be associated with a 25.4% increase in adverse
events compared with control hospitals, including a 27.3% increase in falls, a
37.7% increase in central-line infections, and a 100% increase in surgical site
infections.
More on what this is costing us, and why it's happening, to come.
1 comment:
Perhaps the word "capitalism" has become meaningless. Adam Smith certainly wouldn't recognize that term as used today to apply to this endeavor.
As you've pointed out many times, "health care" doesn't remotely satisfy the preconditions for a market economy.
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