Health care spending in the United States is widely deemed to be growing at an unsustainable rate, and policy-makers increasingly seek ways to slow that growth or reduce spending overall. A key target is eliminating waste—spending that could be eliminated without harming consumers or reducing the quality of care that people receive. According to some estimates, this may constitute one-third to nearly one-half of all U.S. health spending.
Waste can include spending on services that lack evidence of producing better health outcomes, compared to less expensive alternatives; inefficiencies in the provision of health care goods and services; and costs incurred while treating avoidable medical injuries, such as preventable infections in hospitals. It can also include fraud and abuse, which was the topic of a Health Affairs/RWJF Health Policy Brief published on July 31, 2012.
This policy brief focuses on types of waste in health care other than fraud and abuse; on ideas for eliminating it; and on the considerable hurdles that must be overcome to do so.
Health Affairs/RWJF Health Policy Briefs
Series provides clear, accessible overviews of timely and important health policy topics. The briefs are geared to policy-makers, congressional staffers, and others who need short, jargon-free explanations of health policy basics.
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One-third to one-half of annual U.S. health spending may be wasteful