peggy a. honoré, dha, mha chief science officer mississippi department of health
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Advancing a Field of Study in Public Health Finance Emory University Rollins School of Public Health September 23, 2005. Peggy A. Honoré, DHA, MHA Chief Science Officer Mississippi Department of Health [email protected] Funded through an award from the RWJ Foundation. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Advancing a Field of Study inPublic Health Finance
Emory University Rollins School of Public Health
September 23, 2005
Peggy A. Honoré, DHA, MHAChief Science Officer
Mississippi Department of [email protected]
Funded through an award from the RWJ Foundation
Public Health Finance
Advancing as a field of study because of the Sense of Urgency to understand the composition, utilization, and impacts of the
finances that fund all components of the public health system
Jones & Honoré, 2005
Justifications “Efforts at systematic nationwide studies of financing for public health have failed because of their exclusive
focus on the budgets of state and local public health agencies rather than the funding of the public health system”
“Almost no data are available on how much would be needed to adequately build and sustain the necessary public health infrastructure”
“…Lack of systems of accountability to ensure quality and availability of public health services”
The Future of Public Health in the 21st Century, 2003
Public Health Systems Research
A field of inquiry examining the organization, financing, and delivery of public health services at local, state and national levels,
and the impact of these activities on population health………
Mays, Halverson, Scutchfield, JPHMP2003
Public Health Finance as a component of
Public Health Systems Research
Focus of this RWJ funded project:PUBLIC HEALTH FINANCE:
Advancing a field of study through Public Health Systems Research
http://www.sph.emory.edu/PHSR
Defining Public Health Finance
Public Health Finance is a field of science and practice that deals with the acquisition, management, and use of financial resources to advance the health of populations through
prevention and health promotion
Moulton, Halverson, Honoré, Berkowitz, JPHMP2004
Questions/Debate persist regarding the Definition
Healthcare FinanceLouis C. Gapenski, 2004
• The definition depends on the context– Policy maker or manager– Type of healthcare organization
• Practice setting………..Healthcare Finance is the practice of finance, including both accounting and financial management within health services organizations
Healthcare Finance Competencies
Grounded in financial theory and
industry financial management practices
Mauer & Grazier, Task force Report on Development of Core Competencies in Health Care Finance
Steps to advancing a similar theoretical and empirical base in
Public Health Financethrough the RWJ funded project
Public Health FinanceTheoretical and Empirical Base
Thomas E. Getzen, PhD
Rest on three conceptual pillars: I. The theory of investment (Finance) II. The theory of public goods (Economics)III. The theory of population health action (Public Health)
Theory of Investment (Finance)
Thomas E. Getzen, PhD
Essential ElementsRisk and Timing
• What risks exceed market capacity and require government action? (hurricanes, epidemics, war)
• What risks perceptions are difficult and require information from regulatory agencies? (SEC, FDA)
• Which investments provide such diffuse benefits that they cannot be financed through individual or corporate actions? (NIH, CDC, NCHS)
Theory of Public Goods (Economics)
Thomas E. Getzen, PhD
• Public goods answers the question of why people must engage in collective action in order to reap the benefits of individual exchange in the marketplace
• Well established work on the allocation of funding and financial rewards from research has not yet been widely translated and applied to the field of public health
Theories of democracy demonstrate that the public’s health is an important collective [public] good because funds
are expended to benefit all or most of the population
Walzer, 1983
The Theory of Population Health Action (Public Health)Thomas E. Getzen, PhD
• Salient linkages to finance and economics include:– the assessment of risk– the evaluation of distributional consequences– the incidence of fee-based and tax financing– vaccine pricing– funding prevention and health promotion– and many others…….
Competencies What should public health mangers
know about finance?
• Very little content is offered in the accredited SPHs that directly address public health finance concepts
• Only 8 of 32 programs surveyed offered a course with some content relevant to public health finance
• Public Health respondents to a survey added competencies that should be taught such as knowledge about the appropriations process, public financing, governmental systems
• Finance typically a sub-set under a broader category (e.g. management) in national public health competency reports
Gillespie,Kurz, McBride,Schmitz, JPHMP 2004
What do we know about the finances that fund the public
health system?
National Health Expenditures 2003
• $1,678.9 = Total NHE
• $53.8 = Governmental Public Health Activities(3.2% of Total)
CMS National Health Expenditures-Table 3, 2003
Local Health Agency
NACCHO LPHA INFRASTRUCTURE: A CHARTBOOK 2001* 1999
Average Annual
Expenditures
Median
All LPHAs $4,505,096 $621,100
Metropolitan $8,930,091 $1,185,433
Non-Metropolitan$1,195,632
$509,540
0 to 24,999 Population
$437,637 $214,658
500,000 or more $66,200,000 $27,000,000
Local Health Agency
Budget by Funding Source *
• 44% - Local• 30% - State• 19% - Service reimbursement• 3% - Federal• 4% - Other
NACCHO LPHA INFRASTRUCTUREA CHARTBOOK 2001
* 1999
State Expenditures – FY 2003Total Population Health Expenditures
– $19.2 B– 5.4% of State Health Expenditures
• Prevention of Epidemics/Disease– $1.9 B
• Protect Against Environmental Hazards– $5.6 B
• Injury Prevention– $1 B
• Promotion of Chronic Disease/healthy Behavior– $5.9 B
• Disaster Preparedness/Response– $2.3 B
• Health Infrastructure– $2.5 B
2002-2003 State Health Expenditure Report, NASBO/Milbank 2005
CDC Per Capita Dollars to States 2004
$14.93 - National Average
Top 5• $45.74 - Alaska• $32.39 - Vermont• $28.63 Wyoming• 26.50 - North Dakota• $26.31 - Rhode Island
Bottom 5• $ 9.61 - Indiana• $ 9.69 - Ohio• $10.53 - Pennsylvania• $11.12 - Florida• $11.42 - Virginia
Shortchanging America’s Health:A State-By-State look at How Federal Public Health Dollars are Spent
Trust for America’s Health, 2005
Financial Related Research Findings
• Higher LHA performance capacity was greater based on agency expenditures per capita…Kennedy, JPHMP, 2003
• Effective health departments have larger annual expenditures and derive their budgets from a larger number of funding sources while ineffective agencies tend to have Medicaid as a significant source of their budget...Handler & Turnock, JPHP, 1996
• Higher performing public health jurisdictions had higher taxes per capita….Honoré, Simoes, Jones, Moonsinghe, JPHMP, 2004
• Agency spending is a significant predictor of performance…Mays et al, JPHMP, 2004
Topics of Interest • Impact of public health funding on health outcomes• Taxonomies for systematically measuring and
analyzing the national investment in the public health system
• Costs of optimal agency and system performance• Comparisons of flexible and categorical funding
sources • Analysis of funding gaps in the public health system
Data
Hot Topics in Public Health Systems Research
Where’s the Data?
AcademyHealth 2005 Public Health Systems Research Interest Group Meeting
Data Collection • 1970 - ASTHO/PHF Data Reporting System established
• 1995 - Federal funding for the system eliminated
• 1997 - NACCHO LPHA Infrastructure CHARTBOOK
• 2005- NASBO/Milbank State Health Care Expenditure Report
• 2005 - HP2010 Objective (23-16) for $ data deleted
Lack of financial data limits the ability to conduct system-wide public health research
and analysis…
We know little about where the [health] dollars are spent and what they are purchasing
Thorpe,HCFR 1999
Recommended Strategies for Obtaining Public Health Infrastructure Data
Lewin Group, 1997
• Data reporting by state and local public health agencies should be linked to funding streams
• The feasibility of using the ten essential services as a data collection tool should be carefully [cautiously] considered– not currently structured, organized, or funded in a similar manner
Advancing ForwardFunded by: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation• Conference - Feb 8, 2006 - APHA Headquarters D C• Emory Meetings • Speaker’s Bureau • Website (www.sph.emory.edu/PHSR)
System-wide representation:APHA, Pfizer, NGA, NCSL, NACCHO, ASTHO, NALBOH, US Senate, DHHS, CDC, Institute of Medicine, Turning Point, AcademyHealth, MS Department of Health, GA Division of Public Health, Metro Nashville Department of Health, The California Endowment, National Health Policy Forum, Emory University, East Carolina University, Medical University of South Carolina, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Temple University, University of Pittsburgh, Johns Hopkins University, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Journal of Public Health Management and Practice
September/October 2004Issue Focus:
Public Health Finance
http://www.jphmp.com
Journal of Public Health Management and Practice2nd Public Health Finance Issue
January/February 2007
• Analysis of the variation in public health funding• Next steps to advancing public health finance and a national
investment plan• Documentation of public health funding formulas and strategies• Methodologies for local health agency financial analysis• State Health Department Data Collection Case Study • Examination of increased county revenues on local public health
funding and community health status• Newborn screening program financing issues• Examination of different funding mechanisms to improve the
prevalence of dental sealants among Medicaid eligible children• Case study of changes in methods for classifying public health state
appropriations
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