XM no presta servicios a los residentes de Estados Unidos de América.

Ozempic may gift US a $3 trln benefit



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>BREAKINGVIEWS- Ozempic may gift US a $3 trln benefit</title></head><body>

The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.

By Robert Cyran

NEW YORK, July 16 (Reuters Breakingviews) -The United States spends 17% of its gross domestic product on healthcare, about twice as much as the average OECD country, according to the Commonwealth Fund. Can weight loss drugs like Ozempic help shrink that? According to a recent study, the answer is probably no. But other medical breakthroughs have temporarily changed the course of U.S. spending. There’s hope that the fattest developed country in the world can stall growth for good.

A government estimate in June concluded spending will rise 5.6% annually until 2032. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services think it will grow faster than the overall economy thanks to the aging population and poor healthcare productivity, among other things. At $22 trillion – the outlay the organization thinks the country will make by 2032 – it will account for almost 20% of GDP.

In the long arc of the United States' spending on medical treatments, that fits with the trend. Healthcare as a percentage of GDP tripled between 1960 and 2010. The hitch is that, for the last decade or so, the relative figure hasn’t budged.

Obvious suspects don’t fully explain the current slowdown. The Affordable Care Act probably helped. But medical spending growth was slowing prior to its 2010 passage, and major parts of the ACA weren’t phased in until 2016. Other effects, like the pandemic, could be transitory.

Other reasonable explanations offer some reasons for optimism. Harvard professor Joseph Newhouse pointed out people have become willing to pay for medical advances, which improve welfare. People still swallow aspirin, but now also take $100,000 cancer treatments. The onset of key drugs may have also helped. Cardiovascular spending fell dramatically from 2005 to 2012, and Harvard Professor David Cutler attributes half of that reduction to drugs such as statins.

The effects of obesity treatments from Eli Lilly LLY.N and Novo Nordisk NOVOb.CO might be similar. With list prices around $1,000 a month, the use of the drug in non-diabetic patients is probably not cost-effective. Nonprofit KFF, however, estimated the average obese health plan member’s medical spend in 2021 was $12,588 or 2.7 times as much as a non-obese member. If the net cost of the drug could be lowered to $500 a month and this reduced patients’ medical costs to that of non-obese people, that would save about 18% per obese patient, or roughly $250 billion annually based on the current population. And that could underestimate the savings. If healthcare expenditures were capped at 17% of GDP, then that would save the U.S. an estimated $2.6 trillion by 2032.

Of course, thinner patients may incur more or different medical costs. But obesity is associated with most major causes of U.S. death and illness. An ounce of cure is worth a lifetime of expense.

Follow @rob_cyran on X

CONTEXT NEWS

The U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Office of the Actuary releases projections for national health expenditure on June 12. They project average annual growth of 5.6% from 2023 to 2032. That is estimated to grow faster than annual growth in gross domestic product, taking health expenditure from 17.3% in 2022 to 19.7% of GDP in 2032.


Graphic: Obesity drugs may bend healthcare expenditure curve Obesity drugs may bend healthcare expenditure curve https://reut.rs/3zkxa7W


Editing by Lauren Silva Laughlin and Sharon Lam

</body></html>

Descargo de responsabilidades: Cada una de las entidades de XM Group proporciona un servicio de solo ejecución y acceso a nuestra plataforma de trading online, permitiendo a una persona ver o usar el contenido disponible en o a través del sitio web, sin intención de cambiarlo ni ampliarlo. Dicho acceso y uso están sujetos en todo momento a: (i) Términos y Condiciones; (ii) Advertencias de riesgo; y (iii) Descargo completo de responsabilidades. Por lo tanto, dicho contenido se proporciona exclusivamente como información general. En particular, por favor tenga en cuenta que, los contenidos de nuestra plataforma de trading online no son ni solicitud ni una oferta para entrar a realizar transacciones en los mercados financieros. Operar en cualquier mercado financiero implica un nivel de riesgo significativo para su capital.

Todo el material publicado en nuestra plataforma de trading online tiene únicamente fines educativos/informativos y no contiene –y no debe considerarse que contenga– asesoramiento ni recomendaciones financieras, tributarias o de inversión, ni un registro de nuestros precios de trading, ni una oferta ni solicitud de transacción con instrumentos financieros ni promociones financieras no solicitadas.

Cualquier contenido de terceros, así como el contenido preparado por XM, como por ejemplo opiniones, noticias, investigaciones, análisis, precios, otras informaciones o enlaces a sitios de terceros que figuran en este sitio web se proporcionan “tal cual”, como comentarios generales del mercado y no constituyen un asesoramiento en materia de inversión. En la medida en que cualquier contenido se interprete como investigación de inversión, usted debe tener en cuenta y aceptar que dicho contenido no fue concebido ni elaborado de acuerdo con los requisitos legales diseñados para promover la independencia en materia de investigación de inversiones y, por tanto, se considera como una comunicación comercial en virtud de las leyes y regulaciones pertinentes. Por favor, asegúrese de haber leído y comprendido nuestro Aviso sobre investigación de inversión no independiente y advertencia de riesgo en relación con la información anterior, al que se puede acceder aquí.

Advertencia de riesgo: Su capital está en riesgo. Los productos apalancados pueden no ser adecuados para todos. Por favor, tenga en cuenta nuestra Declaración de riesgos.