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1 i (2004)

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HEALTH CARE




Richard D. Miller Jr.
     H. E. Frech III


For many years, health policy in developed countries has rested on the assump-
tion that health-care consumption does relatively little to produce better health.
This new study shows that it is time to rethink conventional wisdom, particularly
regarding consumption of pharmaceuticals. In this sequel to their 1999 book,
The Productivity of Health Care and Pharmaceuticals: An International Comparison,
Richard D. Miller Jr. and H. E. Frech III extend their analysis to quality of life,
disease-specific life expectancy, and the impact of obesity. This is possible because
of newly available data from the World Health Organization and the Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) on disability-adjusted life
expectancy, obesity, and disease-specific death rates.
    Employing a logical econometric model, Miller and Frech focus on eighteen
member countries of the OECD. They find that pharmaceutical consumption
is even more powerful in improving the quality of life than in improving the
length of life. They find variation by cause of death and by age. For individuals
under seventy, pharmaceutical consumption lowers circulatory disease mortality
but has little effect on mortality due to either cancer or respiratory disease. At
later ages, pharmaceutical consumption generally has a stronger impact.
    The fact that pharmaceutical consumption produces better health lends
support to proposals to increase coverage of drugs in both public and private
health insurance systems. Most fundamentally, it shows that policy should no
longer be based on the assumption that health-care consumption does not
improve health, but rather on a new understanding that such consumption-
especially pharmaceutical use-does matter.

Richard D. Miller Jr. is a Senior Research Analyst at the Institute for Public
Research within The CNA Corporation in Alexandria, Virginia. He has also worked
as an economist for the Bureau of Labor Statistics in Washington, D.C.

H. E. Frech III is professor of economics at the University of California, Santa
Barbara, and an adjunct professor at Sciences Po in Paris. He has also been an
economist in the predecessor of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services.


HEALTH CARE


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Pharmaceuticals, Obesity, and the Quality of Life


M_-I
M0WAmerican Enterprise Institute
      for Public Policy Research
      1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W.
      Washington, D.C. 20036


Front cover photograph of baby and woman © Stockbyte/PictureQuest
Front cover photographs of altered Leonardo da Vind work and medical items © Royalty Free/CORBIS


ECONOMICS/HEALTH POLICY


$15.00


Richard D. Miller Jr.


      H. E. Frech III


ISBN 084474194-9


  1 111 J111 5 1500
9 18084 194 9 III

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