Disease Prevention Often Costs More Than It Saves

Michael Maciosek of HealthPartners Research Foundation in Minneapolis found that of 25 highly recommended prevention strategies, 15 cost less than $35,000 for every year of perfect health gained.

Those are definitely bargains if you're using the arbitrary cutoff of $50,000 per healthy year to decide what's a good investment in health spending. And some economists say Americans would be willing to spend even more than that, say $100,000 per perfect health year.

No one really knows how much of the U.S. health care dollar goes toward prevention. The most commonly cited number -- 3 cents of every health care dollar -- is based on 20-year-old data.

An updated number -- nearly 9 cents of every health care dollar -- represents about $194 billion, said George Miller, who led the research for the Altarum Institute, a nonprofit consulting group.

Legislation pushed by Senate Democrats mentions "prevention" repeatedly. The Senate panel heading up health reform also calls for more research on prevention, creates a new interagency council to coordinate a national health promotion strategy and permits insurers to give incentives for health promotion and disease prevention.

President Barack Obama as recently as April said investing in prevention "will save huge amounts of money in the long term." And it has become almost an article of faith among Republicans, Democrats and business leaders that prevention reduces health care costs.

But the Congressional Budget Office last week issued a statement on health care overhaul that dismissed the notion that prevention saves money. Prevention "would have clearer positive effects on health than on the federal budget," the CBO said.

The Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease wants the budget office to be more generous with its review of prevention, to take a longer time frame and to calculate savings to the private sector in lower absenteeism and higher productivity.

But researcher Peter Neumann of Tufts Medical Center said counting on disease prevention to save money "promises painless solutions to our health cost problems. I don't think they're going to be painless and they have to be done."

Supporters say each prevention effort should be held to the same standards as surgical techniques, drugs and medical devices, and not be expected to save dollars: Does it work and at a reasonable cost?

Prevention efforts with high value, although not cost-saving, include flu and pneumococcal shots for adults, Pap smears to screen for cervical cancer, colon cancer screening for people 50 and older, and screenings for vision problems, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and problem drinking.

Each of those things costs less than $35,000 per year of perfect health.

Those strategies are a good place to start when money is limited, experts say.

"Some preventive services save money and some don't. Many of the services that don't save money improve people's lives at relatively low cost," said Robert Gould, president of the nonprofit Partnership for Prevention. "I think that's what the American public wants from health reform."

Source: YellowBrix, Associated Press/AP Online
elitehealth's picture
Quite an impressive observation Carla. Sometimes it happens that we waste a large sum of money on insurance and other medical preventions, and on one day we think, that it would have been better to spend on its cure than its prevention. But sometimes, prevention results into a better decision for someone like me. Because of having many heart problems, I was enrolled in a concierge Healthcare program from elite health. I was attacked by a severe heart attack in a party, luckily surrounded by many people. Some of the sudden changes in my body was recognized by me and anticipated immediately. I got a very severe chest pain which was almost unbearable for more than a minute. I got the suspicion that I might be having heart attack, and immediately called my physician on the phone, and explained my condition and its severity. Because of the immediate guidance, I was directed immediately to have an aspirin which I used to carry with me as prescribed by my physician. It was quite a frightening experience for me to face such a heart attack, but somehow I managed to be calm until 911 arrived. I was immediately taken to the nearest hospital, where already my physician were present and have got everything setup according to my medical history. And it was in some matter of seconds that everything was in control. A doctor, who already have the complete knowledge of the medical history and fitness of the person, extra ordinarily ameliorate your recovery process. Hence such a concierge level program from Elite health, helped me a save my life, like many others.
nancan47's picture
The point of prevention is not saving money, it is the health of the patient.
davidaaa's picture
Reasonable cost? NOT first question re health care. You want good health first. However, cheap prevention is best.
davidaaa's picture
"Does it work at a reasonable cost?" That is NOT the question most Americans ask. Everyone, everywhere, wants good health, first, and they want it regardless of cost. Of course they want to pay minimum for it. This artical, as unclear as it is, refers to your personal health and its cost in abstractions -- like cattle in a herd -- if disease prevention is not cost effective, let 'em suffer or die.
bethanybil's picture
The origins of prevention as a health care strategy go way back to the beginning of the Industrial Age when "enlightened" Industrialists employed doctors and nurses on staff to treat both workers and their families. Over time these enlightened measures proved to be too costly and unsustainable. The last such experiment in prevention as a formal strategy was in Columbia, MD in the late 1960's. In a project originated by Johns Hopkins Hospital mostly Federal government employees were give the option of joining the Columbia Health Clinic. The strategy was to lower costs by making health care more available. It did not work and finally went out of existence after about 20 years of effort.
taptaptap's picture
This article is biased. Prevention can cost little if people are aware of alternative methods for staying healthy. Why would anyone want to be ill, struggling with disease?
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