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Special Communication
JAMA. 1987;257(2):220-224. doi: 10.1001/jama.1987.03390020086032

The Inevitable Failure of Current Cost-Containment Strategies

Why They Can Provide Only Temporary Relief

  1. William B. Schwartz, MD
  1. From the Department of Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine, and the Medical Service, New England Medical Center Hospitals, Boston.

Abstract

Current strategies for controlling hospital costs have focused primarily on eliminating care that is presumed to be of no medical value. These efforts have neglected the central fact that eliminating such care reduces current expenditures, but has little or no influence on three key factors responsible for the upward trend in real costs—population growth, rising input prices ("the hospital market basket"), and technologic innovation and diffusion. Aging of the population and the rising costs of malpractice insurance have received undue attention; together they can account for only three tenths of a percentage point in the upward trend. Gradual elimination of presumably useless care, perhaps as much as 30% of inpatient-days, can save many billions of dollars, but can only offset for a few years the forces causing costs to rise in US community hospitals. Indeed, in 1984, the reduction in patient days and resultant slowing in the real rate of rise to 2.1% appear simply to have concealed an underlying real rate of increase that was close to 7%. After all unnecessary days have been eliminated, the underlying rate of increase will reemerge unless limitations are placed on technologic innovation or beneficial services are rationed.

(JAMA 1987;257:220-224)

Footnotes

  • The opinions and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author and should not be construed as representing the opinions or policies of the Commonwealth Fund, New York, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Princeton, NJ.

  • Reprint requests to Tufts University School of Medicine, 136 Harrison Ave, Boston, MA 02111 (Dr Schwartz).

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