Same health care, different setting, but much higher costs

By |2019-04-25T20:36:11+00:00April 24th, 2019|Health care spending, Health Reform, Insurance, Medicare, Uncategorized, What do we pay for and why|

Same health care, different setting, but much higher costs

There is so much health care news happening right now, you may not have seen this, but different services cost different amounts, depending on where they were delivered. While this concept isn’t necessarily news to health care policy types, this latest data set and accompanying graphics make the issue clearer than ever and beg for a policy fix.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) finalized the Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment and Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment Systems and Quality Reporting Programs Rule November 21, 2018, implementing site neutral payments for hospital outpatient clinic visits. The policy essentially reduces payments for services provided in outpatient settings to the same level as the payment made for the same service in a physician’s office.

However, the policy change applies only to Medicare, which covers less than 20% of the U.S. population. The commercially insured, for example, via employer-sponsored insurance and the individual and small group market, account for 56% of the population (see Charles Gaba, The Psychedelic Donut: Types of Coverage in the U.S.).

Wouldn’t a similar policy for people who receive health insurance outside of Medicare be a way to reduce costs?

Outpatient setting is always more expensive…

The Health Care Cost Institute compared a common set of services performed in physician’s offices and outpatient hospital settings and found “for this set of services, the average price was always higher in an outpatient setting than an office setting.”

Services that saw a significant change when provided in an office vs. an outpatient setting varied by service. Some of the bigger changes were for ultrasounds, upper airway endoscopies, and drug administration. For example, “in 2017, 45.9% of level 5 drug administration visits occurred in outpatient settings, compared to 23.4% in 2009.”

Not only did prices increase over time for both settings, the site differential for some of the visits was stunning.

We took the HCCI info and added a calculation of our own for a few of the visit types to show the percentage difference between the price of a visit in the office setting vs. outpatient setting, as shown in the table below.

It is also something that should be made transparent to patients. As mentioned in a recent , health care costs are rising and people are struggling to afford those costs. States are passing transparency bills left and right (hospital transparency, drug price transparency), even though it is unclear how “transparency” actually lowers costs. However, implementing site neutral payments for all payers (not just Medicare) is a more obvious, and more immediate, improvement to rising health care costs.

It’s a Hospital, It’s a Health Plan, It’s Both!

By |2018-04-20T18:55:42+00:00April 20th, 2018|Health care spending, Health Plans, Hospitals, Insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, Uncategorized|

It’s a Hospital, It’s a Health Plan, It’s Both!

Tufts Health Plan (Watertown, MA) and hospital company Hartford HealthCare (Hartford, CT) have announced a joint venture to form an insurance company, which will focus on providing those over 65 who qualify for Medicare the alternative of purchasing a Medicare Advantage plan.

The “twist” with this joint venture is that it will bring together an insurer and a hospital firm in one company and “it’s a first for Connecticut.

Like many of the new health care collaborations sprouting up, such as Aetna-CVS and Berkshire Hathaway, Amazon and JPMorgan, the name of the game right now is using data better to try to lower costs.

Hartford is looking to Tufts Health Plan to bring “insights around closing gaps in care, identifying members who have needs they may not even be aware of and better coordination of care,” James Cardon, Hartford’s chief integration officer, told the Hartford Courant. Tufts has 1.1 million members across New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island.

Collaborations between health plans and providers are not unknown; however, they are in “relative infancy, and many of the approaches don’t involve as extensive as a commitment that is implied and inherent in a joint venture,” according to Tufts CEO Thomas Croswell.

A key advantage of the joint venture is that it will combine clinical data from Hartford with claims data from Tufts Health Plan, giving the partners the ability to reach out to members. Inherent in these concepts is reaching patients before they have serious health care needs.

Hartford HealthCare CEO Elliot Joseph explained the joint venture was built specifically to address both organizations’ realization that there’s room for improvement in care for patients with chronic conditions, especially in helping seniors manage their care in order to avoid hospitalizations. If reducing costs is the goal, it makes sense that Tufts and Hartford HealthCare are focusing initially on seniors, given their high use of health care services; however, such a strategy is unlikely to work for other populations.

In another example of provider-insurer consolidation, Centene Corp., a Medicaid managed care insurer and the “dominant health plan on the Affordable Care Act exchanges,” plans to buy Florida-based primary-care provider Community Medical Group.

Community Medical will boost Centene’s scale and capabilities around care delivery, and Centene will gain access to the provider’s patient population.

Community Medical Group operates 13 medical centers and two specialty centers serving more than 70,000 Medicaid, Medicare Advantage, and Affordable Care Act exchange patients in Miami-Dade County, FL. As of the end of last year, Centene had 848,000 Florida plan members, and that number is expected to increase as it grows membership in the ACA exchange in Florida.

Centene also announced recently that it has agreed to buy MHM Services, a provider of health care and staffing services to correctional facilities and government agencies, serving 330,000 people.

This strategic approach is all about controlling where plan members receive care, similar to previous deals where an insurer buys a provider group. UnitedHealth Group’s Optum subsidiary bought DaVita’s medical group and acquired Surgical Care Affiliates last year. Humana also bought home healthcare provider Kindred Healthcare last year.

The health care system in the U.S. is changing rapidly. With less direction (or interference, depending on your point of view) from the federal government, health plans and provider groups are leading the way in creating new approaches for care delivery. Whether payers, including employers and consumers are better off, is yet to be seen.

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