Abstract

The need is urgent to bring US health care costs into a sustainable range for both public and private payers. Commonly, programs to contain costs use cuts, such as reductions in payment levels, benefit structures, and eligibility. A less harmful strategy would reduce waste, not value-added care. The opportunity is immense. In just 6 categories of waste--overtreatment, failures of care coordination, failures in execution of care processes, administrative complexity, pricing failures, and fraud and abuse--the sum of the lowest available estimates exceeds 20% of total health care expenditures. The actual total may be far greater. The savings potentially achievable from systematic, comprehensive, and cooperative pursuit of even a fractional reduction in waste are far higher than from more direct and blunter cuts in care and coverage. The potential economic dislocations, however, are severe and require mitigation through careful transition strategies.

Keywords

MedicinePaymentHealth careValue (mathematics)Actuarial sciencePublic economicsBusinessFinanceEconomic growthEconomics

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Publication Info

Year
2012
Type
article
Volume
307
Issue
14
Pages
1513-1513
Citations
1696
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Donald M. Berwick, Andrew Hackbarth (2012). Eliminating Waste in US Health Care. JAMA , 307 (14) , 1513-1513. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2012.362

Identifiers

DOI
10.1001/jama.2012.362