The gathering storm: The uncertain future of US healthcare

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The once-in-a-century pandemic thrust the healthcare industry into the teeth of the storm. The combination of accelerating affordability challenges, access issues exacerbated by clinical staff shortages and COVID-19, and limited population-wide progress on outcomes is ominous. This gathering storm has the potential to reorder the healthcare industry and put nearly half of the profit pools at risk.

Those who thrive will tap into the $1 trillion of improvement available by redesigning their organizations for speed to accelerate productivity improvements, reshaping their portfolio, innovating new business models to refashion care, and reallocating constrained resources. The healthcare industry has lagged behind other industries in applying these practices; players that are able to do so in this crisis could set themselves up for success in the coming years.

This is the first in a five-article series, where we address the following questions: what are the major storm clouds on the horizon, and how does the potential impact compare with past periods of upheaval; how does rising inflation—both broadly, and specifically, as the industry confronts a clinical staff shortage—affect access, costs, and growth; what impact might an endemic COVID-19 have on the expected trajectory of healthcare costs; and what should stakeholders do about it?

The potential for discontinuous change in healthcare has increased.

The turbulence that lies ahead

The arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic marked the end of a decade of relative calm in US healthcare. From 2010 to 2019, real spending on healthcare rose only 0.3 percentage points above growth in real GDP. This compares with a 3.0 percentage-point differential in the decade before the enactment of the Affordable Care Act. Historically, periods of acceleration in healthcare costs well above the growth of the economy have resulted in fiscal interventions by the government (Exhibit 1). Moreover, economic recessions in these periods have led to broader healthcare reforms (Exhibit 2). As inflation persists at the highest levels since the 1970s, the economy has experienced two successive quarters of negative GDP growth and heightened risk of a recession. As a result, the potential for discontinuous change in healthcare has increased.

1
Periods of elevated national health expenditure have been associated with fiscal constraints.
2
Regulatory changes have frequently followed economic recessions.

Our analysis finds that national health expenditure could grow at a rate of 7.1 percent over the next five years from 2022 to 2027, compared with an expected economic growth rate of 4.7 percent. In aggregate, this would equate to healthcare expenditure growth in excess of economic growth of 2.4 percentage points. Health expenditure growth could exceed economic growth by up to 5.9 percentage points in 2023, creating enormous affordability pressure. The potential for healthcare expenditure growth to exceed economic growth so significantly in the shorter term is driven by a combination of current high inflation, a persistent clinical staff shortage, and lower economic growth in 2023 (Exhibit 3).

3
National health expenditure growth with incremental effects could significantly outpace GDP growth over the next two to three years.

Forces fueling the storm

The combination of significantly higher healthcare costs than expected and the challenges facing end payers—employers, consumers, and government—in paying for this increase will force a reckoning in the industry.

Annual incremental healthcare costs of $590 billion

By 2027, US healthcare costs could be $590 billion higher than the projected $5.8 trillion expected in the estimates made pre-COVID-19 (in 2019). Heightened inflation accounts for $370 billion of this difference,1 of which 40 percent is driven by elevated clinical labor inflation rates linked to a shortage of clinical staff.

The United States is projected to face a shortage of more than 200,000 registered nurses and more than 50,000 physicians in the next three years.2Assessing the lingering impact of COVID-19 on the nursing workforce,” McKinsey, May 11, 2002; The complexities of physical supply and demand: Projections from 2019 to 2034, Association of American Medical Colleges, prepared by IHS Markit Ltd., June 2021. In addition to fueling persistent inflation, this clinical staff shortage is likely to create challenges in healthcare access and potentially exacerbate health inequities. Growth and margins for providers are already strained due to this dynamic, and the impact is likely to worsen. Testing, vaccination, and treatment of endemic COVID-19 and the associated increased burden of behavioral-health and other chronic conditions could add another $220 billion in annual costs over the next five years.3

End payers, already struggling to afford healthcare, have limited ability to absorb this potential acceleration in costs.

Affordability challenges faced by end payers

End payers, already struggling to afford healthcare, have limited ability to absorb this potential acceleration in costs.

Employers have continued to shift the cost of healthcare to employees. For example, 18 percent of employees were enrolled in high-deductible health plans in 2013.4 In 2021, 40 percent of employees were enrolled in these health plans.5 In addition, in 2019, the average family contribution to coverage was 32 percent for employees at companies with more than 500 workers and 53 percent at those with less than 499 workers.6 In our recent survey, 95 percent of employers stated that they would adjust benefits if cost increases were 4 percent or higher, with the most common changes being increasing employee cost sharing, shifting to high-deductible health plans, and optimizing the provider network.7

Consumers already face significant exposure to healthcare costs, as noted above, with the rising level of cost sharing in employer-sponsored insurance. In 2021, the average family faced an estimated annual exposure before coverage of $8,000 to $12,000.8 With $20,000 in average household savings in 2021, consumers’ ability to absorb this exposure is limited.9 Furthermore, 22 percent of consumers report having more than $1,000 of medical debt, 34 percent of those who chose to defer care stated it was due to lack of affordability, and 45 percent of consumers state that a $10 increase in the cost of a physician visit would lead them to avoid it.10 Moreover, while US workers are seeing nominal wage increases, inflation has eroded the gains, resulting in negative real earnings growth.11 Consumers’ satisfaction with employer-sponsored healthcare coverage is lower than their satisfaction with Medicare, Medicaid, or individual health insurance exchanges coverage.12

The government may also not be prepared to fund the increase in healthcare costs. The 2022 Medicare Trustees report projects that the hospital insurance trust fund balance will turn negative in 2028, limiting the federal government’s room to maneuver as it relates to costs.13 Recent implementation of 2 percent Medicare sequestration cuts illustrate this issue. If the Medicare trust fund needs to pay for additional healthcare spending, this timeline for trust fund insolvency could accelerate. In addition, federal debt stands at 123 percent of GDP.14 As the Federal Reserve raises interest rates and shrinks its balance sheet, interest payments on federal debt are expected to double as a proportion of the US budget between 2022 to 2027.15

Implications of the storm on the healthcare industry

It is not clear that end payers—employers, consumers, and government funders—will be able to bear this increase, leaving industry players to address the additional spending or face significant EBITDA risk. The forces noted above could put $450 billion of EBITDA16—more than half of the total projected 2027 profit pool—at risk. However, there is a $1 trillion improvement opportunity available in healthcare. It provides the best avenue to improve healthcare for all stakeholders and alleviate the potential margin pressure on the industry. Four areas make up this opportunity:

  • Care delivery transformation. The future of care delivery in the United States is evolving. It is becoming patient-centric, virtual, ambulatory, and available at home. It is also becoming value-based and risk bearing; driven by data and analytics; more transparent and interoperable; enabled by new medical technologies; funded by private investors; and integrated yet fragmented. This radical transformation of the industry introduces potential savings of $420 billion to $550 billion. To capture this value, the transformation must happen much more quickly than the current course and trajectory suggests. For example, achieving these savings would require, among other efforts, shifting 20 to 25 percent of hospital-based volume to alternative sites of clinically appropriate care.17 Based on our research, it would also mean increasing the population in total cost of care, value-based arrangements from about 6 percent today to nearly 40 percent. We know from case examples that risk-bearing, value-based arrangements can materially improve cost of care as well as patient experience, but few, if any, of the effective models have been able to scale.18The next frontier of care delivery in healthcare,” McKinsey, March 24, 2022.
  • Clinical productivity. Over the past one to two decades, labor productivity in the US healthcare industry has declined; between 2001 and 2016, the industry contributed 9 percent of US economic growth but 29 percent of job growth. Previous McKinsey analysis has shown that if the healthcare delivery industry could rely more heavily on labor productivity gains than workforce expansion to meet demand growth, there is a potential savings opportunity of $160 billion to $310 billion. Importantly, many changes could be made within the existing workforce—and also help address the growing clinical staff shortage. There is significant unused capacity in physician schedules today; minor changes such as periodically “pruning” clinically inappropriate preference rules and broadening automatic reminder systems to reduce patient no-shows could contribute material gains. These types of changes could also lead to better access and quality of care, improved inpatient bed and operating-room capacity, and affordability improvements for consumers. Technology-enabled changes to clinical practice (noted below) would provide additional gains.19The productivity imperative for healthcare delivery in the United States,” McKinsey, February 27, 2019.
  • Technology enablement. Healthcare has lagged behind other industries in the application of new technologies, in part due to consumer reticence, the reluctance of highly trained clinicians, entrenched stakeholder interests, a complex regulatory framework, and the fragmented nature of the market. But we also know that progress in healthcare can be exponential when the right conditions for success exist. For example, in April 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, overall telehealth use for office visits and outpatient care was 78 times higher than it was in February of the same year.20Telehealth: A quarter-trillion-dollar post-COVID-19 reality?” McKinsey, July 9, 2021. Three critical technology-backed use cases offer a $250 billion to $350 billion savings opportunity: variability and waste reduction (for example, elimination of common low-value procedures), effective care delivery (for example, using connected devices and virtual care to promote disease management and avoid exacerbations), and more effective deployment of advanced AI, including in nonclinical functions. This opportunity is net of the cost required to develop and implement some of these transformative technologies.21The era of exponential improvement in healthcare?,” McKinsey, May 14, 2019. (In our previous research, we identified nine technologies that could reshape healthcare, which can be organized into five key use cases.)
  • Administrative simplification. Nearly a quarter of US national health expenditure goes toward administrative costs. Our analysis has shown that this could be reduced to about 18 percent through known interventions that can be applied either by individual organizations or by agreement and collaboration between organizations but without requiring industry-wide change. Examples include removing manual work for nursing managers through automated staffing and scheduling tools; building strategic payer–provider platforms to reduce demand by sharing information such as available in-network specialists; and automating repetitive work in human resources and finance. These known interventions all have a positive return on investment and could be deployed using current technology with nominal expense. The resulting system-wide savings would be $270 billion to $320 billion, and could also lead to materially improved employee, provider, and consumer experience.22Administrative simplification: How to save a quarter-trillion dollars in US healthcare,” McKinsey, October 20, 2021.

The headwinds for healthcare are significant and the risks for the industry are sizeable. But the size of the opportunity outstrips those challenges. Innovative models exist and, if scaled up, could deliver the $1 trillion improvement. The challenge for the industry is to scale up these innovative models at speed. Another article in this series, “The gathering storm: An opportunity for leaders to reorder the healthcare industry” outlines the approach industry leaders could adopt to capture these improvements.

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