Equity in the Finance and Delivery of Health Care in the United States Slide presentation from the AHRQ 2008 conference showcasing Agency research and projects. Slide Presentation from the AHRQ 2008 Annual ConferenceOn September 9, 2008, Thomas M. Selden, made this presentation at the 2008 Annual Conference. Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (210 KB; Plugin Software Help).Slide 1Equity in the Finance and Delivery of Health Care in the United StatesThomas M. SeldenAgency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)Slide 2OverviewU.S. health care in 2008: Over 16 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ($2.4T)Complex public/private system Tax-financed (Medicaid, Department of Veterans' Affairs [VA], safety net)Social insurance (Medicare & Workers' Compensation [WC])ESI (partially subsidized) & nongroup>40M without coverageUncompensated careOverall equity studies for U.S.: Wagstaff et al. (1987 data)Gottschalk & Wolfe (1980/81 data)Slide 3ObjectivesAssess equity in financing: Share of income paid by bottom decilesProgressivity indicesAssess equity in delivery: Nonparametric standardization for needSlide 4DataPooled 2002&2003 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS): Civilian noninstitutionalizedAligned with: 2002 National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA) (Selden & Sing, 2008)Brookings-Urban (highest incomes)MEPS Insurance Component (MEPS-IC) (employer premiums)NBER TAXSIMFed, St, Local budgetary dataSlide 5Public/Private MixThe slide shows two pie charts presenting the percentages for "Without Subsidies" and "With Subsidies."Without Subsidies: Income Tax: 19%Indirect Tax: 10%Social Tax: 12%Premiums: 44%Out-of-pocket (OOP): 14%Misc.: 1%With Subsidies: Income Tax: 26%Indirect Tax: 14%Social Tax: 16%Premiums: 30%OOP: 13%Misc.: 1%Slide 6Distribution of Income and Payments by Type, 2002The line graph's vertical axis, cumulative shares (%), goes from 0 to 100 and the horizontal axis, deciles of population (lowest first), goes from 0 to 10. The line graph shows "Income" beginning at 0 and 0%; it slowly rises to 20% by 5; and then steadily rises to finish at 100% by 10.Slide 7Distribution of Income and Payments by Type, 2002The slide presents a duplicate of the previous slide with an added category, "Income Tax." The results show "Income Tax" beginning at 0 and 0%; rising to 5% by 5; then steadily rising to 100% by 10 with the largest increase of 60% between 9 and 10.Slide 8Distribution of Income and Payments by Type, 2002The slide presents a duplicate of the previous slide with the added categories:"Social Insurance," "Premiums," and "OOP." The results show "Social Insurance" matching the line graph for "Income;" "Premiums" beginning at 0 and 0%, rising to 40% by 5, then increasing at intervals of 10% to reach 100% by 10; and "OOP" beginning at 0 and 0% and rising at 10% intervals to reach 100% by 10.Slide 9Distribution of Income and Payments by Type, 2002The slide presents a duplicate of the previous slide with the added category, "Total." The results show "Total" beginning at 0 and 0%, steadily rising to 28% by 5, and finishing at 100% by 10 with the largest increase of 30% between 9 and 10.Slide 10Summary MeasuresConc = 2*(area btw 45° and Lorenz)Kakwani = ConcPAYMENT - ConcINCOME "Regressive" if K<0Slide 11Finance Equity: Summary MeasuresRegressive in 2002 K = -0.098Less regressive than in the past K81 = -0.145 K87 = -0.130Reasons: Income more concentrated, but...Taxes even more concentratedIncreasing public shareSlide 12Less Regressive, but Large Burdens for Low-Income FamiliesThe bar graph presents the "Percentage of Pre-Tax Income" when combining OOP, Premiums, Social Insurance, Other Tax, and Income Tax for 10 deciles of population.All: 18%Deciles 1: 40%Deciles 2: 27%Deciles 3: 23%Deciles 4: 22%Deciles 5: 21%Deciles 6: 20%Deciles 7: 19%Deciles 8: 18%Deciles 9: 17%Deciles 10: 15%Slide 13Less Regressive, but Large Burdens for Low-Income FamiliesLess regressive over time: Comparisons a bit trickyHealth care rising share of personal income.Large shares of income paid by poor.Slide 14Equity in DeliveryWidely-accepted approach: Standardize "needs" with linear regressionAlternative approach: Controlled reweightingEqualize distribution of need: Age, sex, SAH, conditions, disabilityPreserve dist of other variables: Race/ethnicityInsurance coverageSlide 15Distribution of Medical Care (Total Expenditures)The line graph's vertical axis, total expenditures (2002$), goes from 3500 to 6500 and the horizontal axis, deciles, goes from 1 to 10. The results show "Unadjusted" beginning at $6200 at 1, reaching a minimum of $4200 at 4, increasing slightly to $4500 at 6, decreasing to $4300 at 7, and then finishing at $4700 at 10.Slide 16Distribution of Medical Care (Total Expenditures)The slide presents a duplicate of the previous slide with the added categories, "Linear," "Uncont RW," and "Cont RW." The results show, "Linear" beginning at $4700, "Uncont RW" beginning at $4300, and "Cont RW" beginning at $4500. All three reach a minimum of $4100-$4200 at 2; a maximum of $4900-$5000 at 6; a slight decrease to $4300 at 7, and then finish between $5000-$5200 at 10.Slide 17Delivery Equity: ConclusionsAdjusted for needs, use rises with income.Linear and non/semi-parametric approaches yield very similar results.Similar results for office visit counts.Future: Other measures of use: Charges vs expendituresOther use measuresSlide 18ConclusionsBecoming less regressiveLarge (probably growing) share of income for bottom decilesDelivery tilted toward persons in higher deciles: Similar results using new and conventional methods Current as of February 2009 Internet Citation: Equity in the Finance and Delivery of Health Care in the United States. February 2009. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/news/events/conference/2008/Selden2.html