Cost-Conscious Growth-Promoting Treatment: When Discretion Is the Better Part of Value

2018 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 145-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
David B. Allen

Assessing cost-effectiveness of human growth hormone (hGH) treatment to augment height is complicated by uncertainty about how best to measure its therapeutic effect. Cost-conscious growth promotion practice, however, is possible and likely an emerging practical requisite as health care payers increasingly deny the medical necessity of and restrict support for short stature treatment. The increase in denials is not surprising given the expansion and continued high cost of hGH treatment, debate about the value of such treatment, and universal need to restrain burgeoning health care costs. Renunciation of sweeping payer rejection of hGH-for-height treatment is strengthened by cost-conscious practices that (1) recommend no treatment for most short children and restrict treatment to severe, likely disabling short stature; (2) initiate hGH treatment only after evidence-based informed assent; (3) utilize alternative less costly and less invasive options when possible; (4) minimize hGH treatment duration and dosage; and (5) resist enhancement of normal adult stature. A new era of cost-conscious hGH prescribing that prompts thoughtful restraint in hGH use could help preserve hGH approval for children most in need of treatment.

1996 ◽  
Vol 22 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 331-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Malinowski

Health care is being capitated throughout the United States, and much of the spread of capitation is attributable to the efforts of insurers to contain costs. The present lack of comprehensive studies evaluating the impact of capitation on overall health care quality leaves vast room for speculation.Capitation does, however, carry a very fundamental certainty with broad implications. Whether the arrangement calls for a fixed sum for treating a particular ailment, a set fee for meeting all of an individual patient’s health care needs, or a standard charge for supplying all the medication for a specific condition, capitation sets limits. Because the health care costs for any given patient or condition are in reality zero-sum rather than fixed, capitation is about pooling patients and rationing. It involves denying services to some patients despite a general contractual commitment to coverage, presumably so that more patients can be covered or receive better care. The implications of capitation are even more significant when set fully in the context of the overall health care reform now underway. Simultaneously and comprehensively, health care is being managed, made for-profit, and consolidated.


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