Spending Does Extend Life
                              By 
                                Jeff Donn
                                Associated Press
                                
                                BOSTON (AP) -- Despite exploding 
                                costs, most Americans got sizable life-extending 
                                bang for their medical bucks over recent decades, 
                                says one of the most sweeping studies ever of 
                                health-care value. 
                                 
                                That might come as a surprise to anyone who has 
                                ever shuddered over a medical bill, and the report 
                                itself raises doubts over how quickly costs have 
                                escalated. 
                                 
                                However, the study calculated that Americans of 
                                all ages spent an average of $19,900 on medical 
                                care for each extra year of life expectancy gained 
                                over the last four decades of the 20th century. 
                                And that cost is worth it, the study authors say. 
                                
                                 
                                "On average, the return is very high,'' concludes 
                                study leader David Cutler, a Harvard University 
                                health economist. "But it's getting worse 
                                for ... in particular, the elderly.'' 
                                 
                                The federally funded study by researchers at Harvard 
                                and the University of Michigan was being published 
                                Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine. 
                                
                                 
                                The researchers measured value by the cost of 
                                care that extends the average person's life by 
                                one year. The $19,900 spent for each extra year 
                                of life -- when averaged over 40 years -- would 
                                be widely considered a reasonable value. Many 
                                public and private insurers routinely pay for 
                                treatments that cost up to roughly $100,000 for 
                                each additional year of life. 
                                 
                                The researchers attribute this this relatively 
                                low cost for longer lifespan to things like cheap 
                                blood-pressure drugs that prevent heart attacks. 
                                
                                 
                                However, the study also outlines disquieting trends. 
                                It finds that inflation-adjusted costs from birth 
                                rose fivefold between the 1970s and 1990s, when 
                                the cost of an additional year of life span peaked 
                                at $36,300. That means each health care dollar 
                                of the 1990s, when expensive drugs made modest 
                                impact on cancer, bought a fifth as much real 
                                value as 20 years before, when cheaper medicines 
                                saved many lives. 
                                 
                                Values deteriorated seriously for older people, 
                                the study finds. By the 1990s, 65-year-olds paid 
                                $145,000 for each additional year of life gained 
                                -- a value that would be challenged for many individual 
                                treatments. These higher costs presumably come 
                                largely from end-of-life care that doesn't extend 
                                life very much. 
                                 
                                Health policy chief Kathleen Stoll, of the advocacy 
                                group Families USA, said she believes the study 
                                suggests real value anyway. "Each increment 
                                of gain is more expensive now, but certainly very 
                                valuable to the person involved and their family,'' 
                                she said. 
                                 
                                Others were troubled. "The fact that someone 
                                is writing this paper shows how desperate the 
                                health care system is to justify these out-of-control 
                                increases in health spending,'' said consumer 
                                advocate Dr. Sidney Wolfe, who heads health research 
                                at Public Citizen. 
                                 
                                The researchers admit their calculations give 
                                only a partial picture of value. They started 
                                by calculating average changes in both medical 
                                spending and life expectancy for various age groups 
                                in each decade. Then they divided changes in spending 
                                by changes in life expectancy, yielding the cost 
                                per year of life gained. 
                                 
                                But many factors extend life apart from medical 
                                care, like not smoking or keeping extra weight 
                                off. So the researchers turned to previous studies 
                                suggesting that about half of all gains in lifetime 
                                stem from medical care -- and adjusted their findings 
                                accordingly. 
                                 
                                Even the researchers acknowledge this adjustment 
                                could be off. Others familiar with their findings 
                                said their calculations -- while potentially useful 
                                for the big picture -- had to overlook other important 
                                factors, like the impact of care on quality of 
                                life and the amount of waste in the medical system. 
                                
                                 
                                "It really doesn't tell you whether we are 
                                spending too much on what doesn't matter and too 
                                little on what does,'' said Dr. Harlan Krumholz, 
                                a cost-effectiveness expert at Yale University. 
                                Others worried about future costs, though the 
                                study makes no projections. "The growth in 
                                medical spending is unsustainable over time -- 
                                both in terms of absolute dollars and the benefit 
                                it yields,'' said health care analyst Steven Findlay