• Health affairs · Mar 2003

    Spending and service use among people with the fifteen most costly medical conditions, 1997.

    • Joel W Cohen and Nancy A Krauss.
    • Division of Social and Economic Research, Center for Cost and Financing Studies, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, Maryland, USA.
    • Health Aff (Millwood). 2003 Mar 1;22(2):129-38.

    AbstractThis study addresses the Institute of Medicine's recommendation that AHRQ use MEPS data to identify a set of priority conditions to inform efforts at improving quality of care. Using MEPS data we identify the fifteen most expensive conditions in the U.S. in 1997: chronic diseases such as heart disease, cancer, and diabetes, and acute conditions such as trauma, pneumonia, and infectious disease. Comorbidities were also associated with increased expenses. Type-of-service and source-of-payment distributions varied considerably across this set of conditions. Our findings highlight some of the challenges likely to be encountered in efforts to reform the current system.

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