Upload
aubrey-poole
View
213
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Disease Management ColloquiumPhiladelphia, PA May 7-9, 2007
International DM and ApproachesLucia S. Rosenberg
Senior Vice President of Product DevelopmentU. S. Preventive Medicine
Warren E. Todd, MBAExecutive Director
International Disease Management [email protected]
Our agenda….this morning
Part 1
• Welcome – International Participants
• A World in Crisis/the Bi-Modal Threat…can we change in time
Part 2
• The Status of DM in the United States…impact on Int’l
• Is it Working in the US – Early outcomes feedback
• Lessons Learned from the US DM Experience
• The Global DM Experience – different models of DM in Europe and around the world
• Critical Success Areas: behavior change, technology, measurement, and policy change. The Ultimate Solution – disease prevention.
• Recommendations for “moving the agenda”
• Dr. Roberto Albuquerque, MD, Medlar – Brazil
• Guus Asijee, Alkmaar – The Netherlands
• Carlos Suslik- IBMEC-SP – Brazil
• Nelson Teich, MD, MedInsight – Brazil
• Juiliana Vessani, Axismed - Brazil
Some of Our International Guests
Aging/Chronic Disease Obesity/Metabolic Syndrome
Essentially…We Have A Dual World Crisis of Chronic Disease and Obesity
Obesity/Unhealthly Lifestyles
1995
Obesity Trends* Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 1990, 1995, 2005
(*BMI 30, or about 30 lbs overweight for 5’4” person)
2005
1990
No Data <10% 10%–14% 15%–19% 20%–24% 25%–29% ≥30%
Source: CDC
USA # 1 Breakfast Export…885 Calories
Enormous Omelet Sandwich - Burger King®
-760 total calories-450 calories from fat-2080 mg Sodium
Coffee
Juice
+
+
3-28-05
Did taste Great!!Clinicians…Beware!!
USA # 1 Lunch Export…1580 Calories
-970 total calories-530 calories from fat-2060 mg Sodium
Classic Triple with cheese …enough to satisfy any hunger
Biggie® French Fries…piping-hot & golden brown
-490 total calories -210 calories from fat -480 mg Sodium
Medium Cola Soft Drink..the perfect complement
+ +
Wendy’s® - 2005
-120 total calories
The Big Four….McDonald’s
30,000 facilities in 118 countries…..
• Moscow - Pushkin Square facility serves 40,000 every day• Kuwait - opening in 1994 has 15,000 customers lined up• China – 350 facilities & workforce of 38,000• Hong Kong – 158 franchises [1 per 42k residents which is close
to the US at 1 per 30K residents]• Japan – 3,000 franchises• India – planned investment of $75 million to triple the number of
facilities [Maharaja Mac is lamb-based]
Source: Food Fight by Kelly D. Brownell, PhD, Yale Center for Eating & Weight Disorders, 2004
The Other Big Three….
Donuts & Pizza & Fried Chicken
Fried Chicken – KFC [Kentucky Fried Chicken] 1st foreign fast food chain allowed to enter China with 500 outlets to grow to 5,000…KFC is the most recognized foreign brand in China…over Coke,Nestle, and Mickey Mouse!
Dunkin Donuts Sells 6.4 million donuts per day [enough to circle the earth twice – 2.3 billion/year]
• 1,000th facility opened in Thailand in 1995• 5,000th facility opened in Bali, Indonesia in 2000
Pizza – Domino’s & Pizza Hut vie for international leadership• Domino’s – 2,094 outlets in 61 countries• Pizza Hut – 4,000 outlets in 90 countries
Source: Food Fight by Kelly D. Brownell, PhD, Yale Center for Eating & Weight Disorders, 2004
+ 25 Lbs
The Global Obesity Crisis…Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention has declared that obesity is the No. 1 health threat in the United
States today.[65 percent of U.S. adults are considered overweight with 38.8 million American adults classified as obese]
“Obesity has taken the place of famine as one of China's top concerns”
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
1992 2002 2006 2015
In Shanghaiover 15% of primary school children are obese vs. 8% for the country
200 Million
90Million
60Million
30Million
Source: 8/4/2005, South Asia News @ www.Onlypunjab.com
Obesity.. in China?
An Obesity Epidemic….
• Rate of obesity in China increased 97% in 10 years• Obesity levels have soared from 10% in 1982 to 15% in 1992 and
25% in 2004• 18% of the Chinese population are now overweight• 50% of Chinese adults between 39-59 are overweight• 18 million adults in China are obese, 137 million are overweight. • 30% of people in major cities are overweight [maybe as high as
60% in Beijing]• Overweight adolescents have 70% greater risk of becoming
overweight or obese as adult
Impact on Chronic Disease…
• 100 million people in China suffer from high blood pressure and 26 million with diabetes
• 64 million have metabolic syndrome-a condition • A BMI index increase of 2 points, increases the risk for coronary
heart diseases and stroke increase by 15.4% and 6.1%
Obesity in China….
Obese individuals are at increased risk for many diseases and health conditions, including the following:
Hypertension (high blood pressure) Osteoarthritis Dyslipidemia
(high total cholesterol or high levels of triglycerides) Type 2 diabetes
Coronary heart disease Stroke
Gallbladder disease Sleep apnea and respiratory problems
Some cancers (endometrial, breast, and colon)
Source: CDC
Chronic Disease
Cardiovascular disease, mainly heart disease, stroke
Cancer Chronic respiratory diseases Diabetes
Chronic diseases
Myths:1. It mostly high income countries
2. Low/Middle income countries should focus on infectious disease vs. chronic disease
3. It affect mainly rich people
4. It primarily affect older people
5. It primarily affect men
6. It are the results of unhealthy lifestyles
7. Chronic disease cannot be prevented
8. Chronic disease prevention is too expensive
9. 1/2 truths: “my grandfather smoked and was overweight and he lived to be 96, therefore I do not need to worry
10. Everyone needs to die of something
Reality:1. FALSE
2. FALSE
3. FALSE
4. FALSE
5. FALSE
6. FALSE
7. FALSE
8. FALSE
9. ½ FALSE
10. True…but ideally not slowly and painfully
Importance of Controlling Chronic Disease
Chronic Disease isAlso Important in Low & Low MiddleIncome
US Healthcare Spending Will Double in this Decade
Source: HCFA Office of the Actuary, National Health Statistics Group, as tabulated in Health Affairs, March/April 2001
$119$174
$89
$149
$296
$148
$176
$377
$211
$203
$438
$227
$240
$531
$259
$403
$903
$441
$-
$500
$1,000
$1,500
$2,000
$2,500
$3,000
Na
tio
na
l He
alt
h E
xp
en
dit
ure
s (
in B
illio
ns
)
1988 1993 1998 2000 2002 2010
Consumer out-of-pocket payments Private Health Insurance Other Private FundsMedicare Medicaid - Federal Portion Other FederalMedicaid - State Portion Other State & Local
$2.6 Trillion
$1.5 Trillion
$1.3 Trillion$1.14
Trillion$888
Billion
$558 Billion
- 16% of Gross National Product
- Chronic conditions attribute to 60% of US healthcare Costs
- ½ of Americans suffer from at least one chronic disease
- 60 Million Americans suffer from multiple chronic diseases
- US population over 60 will increase from 40 to 70 million in next decade
$2.6 Trillion by 2010
We are not doing a good job!
• People with chronic conditions only receive 56.1% of recommended care*
• Only 24% of people with diabetes received three or more HbA1c tests in a two year period
• Only 45% of people presenting with an MI received beta-blockers
Condition % Not Receiving Recommended Care
Diabetes 54.6%
Hyperlipidemia 51.4%
Asthma 46.5%
COPD 42%
CHF 36.1%
Hypertension 35.3%
CAD 32%
* Source: McGlynn, Asch et al, The Quality of Health Care Delivered to Adults in the US NEJM 2003; 348:2635-48
The portion of GNP spent on health care is greater than any other nation in the world.
US = 16.7% UK = 11% Germany = 9%
Yet
Less than 4% of the US Health Care Dollar
is spent towards Prevention
18-50 Age Group 50-90 Age Group
Bi-Modal Healthcare Crisis
Boomers
NextGeneration
Prevention& DM
DiseaseManagement& Prevention
I N N O V A T I O NI N N O V A T I O N
Obesity
ChronicDisease
LifeExpectancy
?
Worker: Retiree Ratios
Year Ratio of Worker:Retirees
Average Life Expectancy
1935 25:1 61 Years
1950 16:1 68 Years
2000 3.3:1 76 Years
2025-2030 < 2:1 > 78 YearsSource: Wall Street Journal, May 18,2000 A.26
Vulnerability to Aging in Developed CountriesPublic Benefits to the Elderly as % of GNP
Source: Watson Wyatt Report on Aging; March 2003
33.1
Healthcare Crisis….
• Bottom-line.…Our leaders are trying hard.• We have the knowledge and technology• Changing healthcare is very difficult• The rewards are HUGE but political as it is a matter of
how to allocate resources & requires major policy changes
• Must benefit and tap into global lessons learned. The answer is “global collaboration” to correct decades
of lifestyle problems….together we can do it.• Disease management is a merely a “catalyst for
change”
The Past: US Model of DMFuture: Global Experience - Catalyst for Change
Disease ManagementSo…..How are we doing?
DM and Wellness Initiative in the United States and around the world!