News_

How we overuse (and underuse) health funding

9 January 2017
How do we hit the 'sweet spot' healthcare resource allocation?

International experts have pinpointed how reforming the overuse and underuse of health and medical services around the world can improve health outcomes and stem spiralling costs of healthcare.

Launched today by The Lancet, the ‘Right Care Series’ features major commentaries by Vikas Saini (Lown Institute, Boston), Adam Elshaug (University of Sydney), Paul Glasziou (Bond University), Don Berwick (Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Cambridge, MA) and others who examine the areas and extent of overuse and underuse of health and medical services.

The series defines overuse as “the provision of medical services that are more likely to cause harm than good”, and underuse as “the failure to use effective and affordable medical interventions”.

The authors reveal that both overuse and underuse are extensive problems but happen side-by-side in different countries, within countries, among populations, within institutions, and even for a single person.

All countries including Australia are struggling with spiralling costs of health care.
Professor Adam Elshaug, University of Sydney

“This situation offers an enormous, and currently poorly recognised, opportunity to tackle underuse and overuse together to achieve the right care for health and wellbeing, and a sustainable health care system,” said Professor Paul Glasziou of Bond University.

Australian lead author, Professor Adam Elshaug of the University of Sydney added: “All countries including Australia are struggling with spiralling costs of health care, with increasing prospects of rationing and restricting services — which would increase inequality and worsen our health outcomes.

"It’s tempting to think that rich countries will have overuse problems and poor countries will have underuse problems, but it’s not that simple.  In Australia, the U.S. and elsewhere, you actually see both problems – worthwhile, cost-effective interventions that are vastly underused, and high-cost effective services of little or no value that are commonplace. 

Professor Elshaug also points out the growing relevance of this issue within the Asia-Pacific region, as more developing economies through Asia strive for universal health care (UHC).

He states: “ensuring that everyone within a society has equitable access to some agreed basic level of affordable, effective and wanted health care services is a moral imperative now formally recognized by the United Nations.

"However, as we state in our Series of papers, the journey to UHC will – and ought to – focus more of the world’s attention towards redressing low-value care as an urgent task. The fundamental ethical, economic, and political challenge arising from poor care is that as long as funds – including tax-payers funds via Medicare - are devoted to low-value care, the potential for health gain elsewhere in the system is unnecessarily restricted.”

In commenting on the Series, Professor Don Berwick, Director of the Institute for Health Improvement, said: "This landmark Lancet Series on overuse and underuse constitutes a call-to-arms to improve health care globally by better matching care to needs, and practice to science. Reducing unwarranted, useless, and, therefore, harmful care is an important part of that agenda." 

Dan Gaffney

Media & PR Adviser (Medicine, Dentistry, Nursing and Pharmacy)
Address
  • Room N302 Pharmacy A15