Less than a week after the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case that could have great impact on the Affordable Care Act, new research from U-M paints a picture of health care spending by the group most targeted under what has become known as Obamacare.
The School of Public Health study of Americans younger than 65 not only offers a glimpse into what may happen if King v. Burwell “unravels the subsidies in the federal health insurance exchange,” said study author Richard Hirth, but it could offer insight into how well insurance markets will respond to the long-term spending by this population.
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U-M researchers, along with a member of Arbor Research, used the Truven Health MarketScan database to look at six years of claims between 2003-08 representing millions of employees and dependents from 100 primarily self-insured, medium and large employers. The number of enrollees jumped during the period from 8 million in 2003 to 41 million in 2008.
During the six-year period, nearly 70 percent of enrollees never appeared in the top 10 percent of spenders, and the bottom 50 percent accounted for less than 10 percent of total health care spending. Seven percent of this population was in the top 10 percent of spenders three or more times during the six-year follow-up.
“It is well-known that in any given year, spending will be highly concentrated,” said Hirth, associate chair and professor in the Department of Health Management and Policy. “The top 5 percent will account for nearly half of all health expenditures and the bottom 50 percent will only account for about 5 percent of spending.”
The study, he said, demonstrates how little those concentration statistics change, even over a six-year period. The top 5 percent still account for a large share of total spending (about 35 percent) and the bottom 50 percent still account for a small share (less than 10 percent).
“There is considerable persistence of spending on both ends of the spectrum,” Hirth said. “Those who are low spenders tend to remain that way. The fact that 70 percent of the under-65 population was never in the top 10 percent of spenders over a six-year period suggests that many low-cost individuals will likely drop out of the market.”
Hirth said the research offers those who administer health care a picture of how the past could predict future spending, which could inform disease-management programs and interventions designed to mitigate future costs.
“While it is not surprising that chronic conditions such as diabetes and AIDS had the strongest ability to predict spending well into the future, the fact that even more acute conditions and relatively severe psychiatric diagnoses maintained much of their ability to predict future spending implies that efforts to manage these conditions and their long-term trajectories may be more significant than previously realized,” he said.
Other researchers were Helen Levy, Jeffrey Smith, Sebastian Calónico and Anup Das of SPH and Teresa Gibson of Arbor Research. Hirth and Levy are affiliated with the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation.