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Nov
29, 2000 - 05:58 PM
Chronic Illness Burden Rising
Faster Than Expected
By
Lauran Neergaard
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) - Nearly half of Americans suffer at
least one chronic disease, everything from allergies to heart disease - 20
million more than doctors had anticipated this year, researchers say.
And they warn that the
fast-growing toll, now at 125 million among a population of 276 million,
will reach 157 million by 2020. One-fifth of Americans have two or more chronic
illnesses, complicating their care and making it more expensive.
The nation is
unprepared to cope with the growing burden of chronic disease, with annual
medical bills alone expected to almost double to $1.07 trillion by 2020,
Dr. Gerard Anderson of Baltimore's Johns Hopkins University told a meeting
Wednesday of 1,000 chronic disease specialists.
"We think it's the
major public health challenge that could affect all Americans,"
Anderson said.
While doctors have made
major advances in treating certain chronic illnesses, they cause 70 percent
of all U.S. deaths, reports the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, which convened the meeting to explore ways to better prevent
and fight long-term illness.
It's a difficult
subject partly because so many different diseases qualify. Simple allergies
may not kill someone, but require a lifetime of medication and doctor
visits. Heart disease can require even more complex drug therapy, surgery
and testing. At the other extreme is Alzheimer's disease, eventually
requiring round-the-clock care.
Preventive care -
weight management, disease screening, nutrition, exercise, geriatric
assessments for the elderly - can stave off many chronic diseases. But it
takes longer than writing a prescription, and few insurers reimburse fully,
Anderson said.
He quoted an insurance
director who said his patients demand payment for such care as in vitro
fertilization, not ways to prevent illnesses they might not get for
decades.
Then he cited a rural
Maryland physician's lament about his diabetic patient, an overweight
farmer whose insurance pays for a 20-minute visit, just enough time to test
his blood sugar and adjust medication. The doctor says helping the man lose
weight would do more good, but he is not paid to do that.
Already 60 million
Americans suffer multiple chronic illnesses, a number expected to reach 81
million by 2020 as the population ages, Anderson reported.
Someone without a
chronic illnesses pays an average of $182 a year in out-of-pocket health expenses,
Anderson said, compared with $369 in out-of-pocket payments by patients
with one chronic illness and $1,106 for someone battling three or more.
Total annual health
costs for someone with one chronic illness are more than five times higher
than for a healthy person - $6,032 vs. $1,105 - and rise even higher the
more disabling the chronic illness is, he reported.
AP-ES-11-29-00 1759EST
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