How much does the U.S. spend to treat different diseases?

This collection of charts and a related brief explore trends in the costs of treating diseases. The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) disease-based health spending estimates allows users to examine national health spending trends by disease category from 2000 – 2012. The BEA satellite account differs from the official national health expenditure accounts, developed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which break out spending by type of service. This means that, in addition to knowing how much the U.S. spends on hospital care, for example, we can now also know how much the U.S. spends to treat different diseases like circulatory conditions and cancer. 

Circulatory and ill-defined conditions, such as check-ups, are the largest categories of spending


Circulatory conditions had been the largest contributor to health spending, for at least a decade, until 2012 when they were surpassed in total spending by ill-defined conditions (a category including check-ups, follow-up appointments, preventive care, and treatment of minor conditions such as colds, flus, and allergies). In 2013, $253 billion was spent on ill-defined conditions, and $236 billion went toward the treatment of circulatory conditions.

The top 5 disease categories account for half of spending


The top five disease-based spending categories (ill-defined conditions, circulatory, musculoskeletal, respiratory, and endocrine) account for half of all medical services spending by disease category. Ill-defined conditions each represent about 13% of overall health spending by disease while circulatory, musculoskeletal, respiratory, and endocrine conditions represent 12%, 10%, 8%, and 7% respectively.

Spending grew fastest for ill-defined conditions and slowest for circulatory conditions from 2000-2013


From 2000 – 2013, among the major disease categories, the fastest spending growth was on ill-defined conditions and endocrine disorders.

About a third of medical services cost growth was from ill-defined, musculoskeletal, and circulatory conditions


Ill-defined conditions accounted for 16.5% of medical services spending growth. Treatments for circulatory and endocrine diseases were the second and third largest contributors to overall health services spending growth over the 2000 – 2013 period. Together, these three disease areas account for 36% of health services spending growth by disease. 

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Among major disease categories, the cost per case grew fastest for infectious diseases


The cost of treating infectious diseases has grown faster than any category (the price index for this category grew at an average annual growth rate of 5.5% from 2000 to 2013).

Price indexes in the Health Care Satellite Account differ from official price indexes in that they are not only influenced by the price of a given treatment, but also by greater treatment intensity per visit, shifts from lower-cost to higher-cost treatments, and movement into less restrictive insurance plans.

The number of treated cases grew fastest for endocrine disorders and ill-defined conditions


The number of treated cases grew fastest for ill-defined conditions and endocrine disorders, each at an average annual growth rate of 4.4% from 2000-2012. (Because the spending changes above adjust for treatment cost, they primarily represent changes in the number of cases over the time period.) 

The cost per case has grown faster than the number of treated cases in most years since 2001


Over the 2000-2012 period, the cost per case generally grew faster than the number of treated cases. 2012 was the first time in recent years that the number of treated cases grew faster than the cost per case.

Increases in prices and service intensity have driven most of spending growth


Over the 2000-2012 period, about 65% of per capita spending growth can be attributed to growth in the cost per case, with the remaining 35% due to non-price factors. (This estimate differs from that previously released by the BEA because the number of treated cases started to drive the growth relatively more in the most recent years.)

Major disease categories have mostly seen better outcomes along with higher spending


Assessing the value of health care spending is challenging for a number of reasons (including limited availability of outcomes data, differences in categorization between data sources, and inability to control for socioeconomic and other external factors that influence health). Disability Adjusted Life Years (DALYs) are one way to measure health outcomes that account for both premature death and years lived with disability. In the 2005-2010 period, the increase in per capita spending generally corresponded with an improvement in DALYs. A study done by researchers at the BEA comparing spending and outcomes across 30 chronic conditions from 1987-2010 found that “overall gains in health outcomes for the population more than offset the increase in the average cost of treatment, suggesting a positive net value for medical spending.”

The Peterson Center on Healthcare and KFF are partnering to monitor how well the U.S. healthcare system is performing in terms of quality and cost.

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