Not mentioned: environmental degradation and scarcities as demographically
related offsetting factors, incl.resultant increased sickness & more violent
conflict. (both would increase costs/capita) Also, increased vigor/age might
increase negative feedback to system via more travel & higher general
consumption/waste generation. Sort of a viscious circle. But some good points
IMO.

Steve
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summary by SCIENCE-WEEK [http://scienceweek.com] 26Mar99


IMPACT OF BIOTECHNOLOGY ON FUTURE HEALTH CARE ECONOMICS
Many economists and policy-makers believe that one of the most
serious problems to face the US health care system and the US
economy in the 21st century will be the demographic shift caused
by the aging of persons born between 1946 and 1963 (the "baby
boom" population). ... ...  H. Pardes et al (6 authors at 6
installations, US) present a proposal that progress in
biotechnology may seriously reduce the magnitude of the problem
of health care in the next century by rapidly altering medical
knowledge and practice, health delivery and outcomes, and total
health costs. The authors identify the following factors:
... 1) Declining disability among people over 65 years of age:
The age-adjusted chronic disability prevalence rate has been
declining 1.3 percent annually over the past 13 years, and this
is consistent with the introduction of new biotechnologies, e.g.,
better drug treatments of osteoporosis, stroke, Parkinson's
disease, and congestive heart failure.
... 2) Changing paradigms of medicine: Technological advances are
defining new paradigms for medicine to which traditional economic
theory may not apply. Improved understanding of human biology at
the molecular level may make invasive surgery, intensive care
units, and long-term nursing home care far less necessary.
... 3) Reduced health care cost at later ages: Health costs in
the last 2 years of life in fact decline in persons dying at
later ages (e.g., persons dying at age 90 as opposed to persons
dying at age 67. The cost ratio is 1:3)
... 4) The developing revolution in pharmaceutical methods:
Savings resulting from new medical knowledge will be multiplied
by the ability to screen promising compounds at rates
unimaginable a few years ago. Miniaturization and robotic
chemistry, allied with genetics and high-throughput screening and
bioinformatics, both provide a clearer picture of drug efficacy
before clinical trials and may reduce certain pretrial
development costs by a factor of 100.
... 5) An increase in public expectations about health at later
ages: A better-educated older population will be driven by rising
health expectations, resulting in behavioral changes identified
by biomedical research as improving health.
... 6) Labor productivity as a function of improved health:
Decreased morbidity will increase the productivity of the labor
force and extend such productivity to older populations. This
will make feasible the raising of the age of Medicare and Social
Security eligibility.
... 7) Growing importance of biotechnology to the economy: Beyond
its impact on individual health, biotechnology is an important
engine of US economic growth, and biotech industries could
experience growth similar to that experienced by the computer
industry during the past 20 years, with a resulting significant
increase in the gross domestic product.
... The authors conclude: "Looking at health care as a
multicomponent dynamic subsystem of the US economy allows us to
appreciate the multiplier effects biotechnological innovations
may produce to control future costs. However, there may by a 15-
to 20-year lag between a scientific observation and its clinical
implementation. We must increase investment heavily in biomedical
research to realize benefits in time to control the impact of
Medicare costs."
-----------
H. Pardes et al: Effects of medical research on health care and
the economy.
(Science 1 Jan 99 283:36)
QY: H. Pardes [[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
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