As I sit here on December 31st, rolling over into a new health insurance plan with a fresh new deductible tomorrow, I am thinking dollars. Last January 2008, I was inpatient at Beth Israel Medical Center after my first Grand Mal Seizure - maxing out our deductible in the first week of the month. I think it was $1,500 for that particular plan, plus 10%. Going to the doctor gets expensive around here. (My blood draw today was $35.00) I believe our new plan is somewhat less, because we're anticipating my health needs, but the weekly costs have got to be higher.
Businessweek:
Painfully Thin
"More than one-third of U.S. adults are obese, and 207,000 of them had bariatric surgery last year to reduce the size of their stomachs, a 100% increase since 1999. For people who are 100 pounds or more overweight, stomach stapling, gastric banding, or stomach bypass operations can be life-altering, and seemingly well worth the $30,000 average cost. But the risk of complications is high, many patients regain the weight, and one study estimates that it can take five to 10 years to recoup the costs through savings on drugs and other interventions."
The study follows:
| Return on Investment for Bariatric Surgery |
| Eric A. Finkelstein, PhD, MHA; and Derek S. Brown, PhD |
In this issue of the Journal, Crémieux and colleagues1
report on an analysis of the return on investment for bariatric
surgery. The authors used health insurance claims data for more than
3600 patients who underwent a bariatric procedure and for a matched
control group to estimate the length of time required before the
procedure breaks even (return on investment period) from the insurer’s
perspective. The authors find that procedure-related costs are fully
recovered after 53 months. For laparoscopic procedures, the estimated
return on investment is reduced to 25 months. This article makes a nice
contribution to the still sparse literature on the economics of
bariatric surgery. However, 2 important and subtle points require
further discussion. First, the return on investment estimates are driven primarily by
rising costs in their matched control group rather than by a reduction
in costs from the bariatric sample. When the authors refer to
“savings,” they are actually referring to the difference in costs
between the surgery and control groups in the postsurgery period.
Consider the savings that the authors report for month 19 and beyond.
These are forecast to be $545 per month for the overall bariatric
population and $926 per month for the laparoscopic-only sample. But in
Table 1 of their article, the authors report costs for 5 months before
surgery of $2443, or roughly $489 per month. Because the monthly
savings figures exceed the presurgery mean costs, and dramatically so
for the laparoscopic sample, the return on investment estimates seem to
result from substantially higher cost increases in the control group
relative to the surgery group in the postsurgery period. Second, because of data limitations, the authors’ return on
investment estimates are based on the assumption that the differential
in costs between the 2 groups (ie, the savings) is constant after month
19 for the overall sample and after month 13 for the laparoscopic
sample. Whether or not this assumption holds in reality will only be
answered once additional follow-up data become available. If this
assumption is not met or if another control group has a different cost
profile, then the return on investment could be substantially
increased. To further highlight these points, the Figure
herein (based on claims data from Medstat’s proprietary MarketScan
database; Thomson Reuters, Ann Arbor, Michigan) provides a graphical
depiction of the cost implications of bariatric surgery. The Figure
shows insurance payments before and after gastric bypass surgery
(payments for the month of surgery are removed because they make it
more difficult to see the trends). In the roughly 54 months after the procedure takes place (the
duration that the data provide reliable estimates for), the Figure
confirms that costs in the postsurgery period seem to be no less than
those in the presurgery period. Although gastric bypass has been shown
to reduce weight and to improve comorbidities, there are several
reasons why costs are not reduced. First, we found that a few
individuals experienced severe adverse events that required lengthy and
expensive readmissions (EAF and DSB, unpublished data, 2008). Second,
other recipients had high costs because the procedure was so
successful. In several cases, individuals lost so much weight that they
required subsequent surgical procedures to have excess skin removed.
There was even evidence of hip and knee replacements that likely
resulted from formerly obese individuals’ becoming active and realizing
that the damage their excess weight caused on their joints could only
be fixed through additional surgical procedures, operations that would
not have been required if not for the successful weight loss resulting
from the procedure. The Figure also reveals substantial variability in
the monthly cost estimates, suggesting that the assumption of constant
savings after month 19 (or month 13) is unlikely to hold in reality. It
would be interesting to see a similar figure of the data by Crémieux et
al showing monthly costs for the surgery and control samples to confirm
that rising costs in the control sample are generating their return on
investment estimates. As a parting note, we would like to add some caution for insurers
and other payers. If coverage decisions are predicated on achieving
returns on investment as short as those presented by Crémieux et al—and
an internal ex post analysis produces results that are not as favorable
because a within sample analysis akin to that in the Figure is
conducted or because some of the assumptions in the study by Crémieux
and colleagues do not materialize—then it is likely that the decision
to cover the procedure will be reversed. As a result, those who could
truly benefit from the procedure would not be able to do so without
paying 100% of the costs out-of-pocket. For this reason, we have
counseled bariatric device manufacturers, insurers, employers, and
others against focusing on return on investment as a means for making
coverage decisions for bariatric procedures. Bariatric procedures should not be held to a different standard than
other medical or surgical interventions, regardless of what the return
on investment might actually be. For example, no one asks to see a
positive return on investment for treatment of cancer, heart disease,
or diabetes mellitus, yet treatments for these conditions are covered
in almost every health plan. The coverage decision should be based on
whether or not the intervention can improve the condition in a
cost-effective manner compared with other potential treatments. Making
this determination requires information on efficacy and
cost-effectiveness relative to other treatment options, but cost
savings are not part of the calculus, nor should they be. To this
point, when we presented the Figure herein to the chief medical officer
of a private health plan, he responded that the results were as
expected but that he would continue to cover bariatric procedures
(although only at “Centers of Excellence”) because they represent the
best available alternative for treating individuals with morbid obesity
(oral communication, September 2006). We would encourage others to make
a similar assessment to determine whether or not coverage is
appropriate for their population, regardless of what the return on
investment might actually be. |
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