Monday, November 25, 2019

Should Medical Costs Be Disclosed in Advance? Standardized?


Finding out healthcare costs isn’t easy. Patients typically don’t learn them in advance. Often even the nurses, doctors, and other medical professionals in a hospital probably don’t know the health care costs for various procedures--billing is typically done by a different department of the hospital.

Indeed, when one faces a medical emergency, the patient and medical professionals are perhaps focused on diagnosing and treating whatever health need prompts the emergency rather than focusing on costs. Often that is the way it should be. In some cases until a patient is properly diagnosed and treated, the total financial cost involved is not known.

But for nonemergency medical needs, it is often (if not always) good for patients to know in advance approximately what the costs will be for various options and what the likely outcomes will be.

Recent Government Action
On November 15, 2019 the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced[1] that “the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is issuing two rules . . . to increase price transparency to empower patients and increase price competition among all hospitals, group health plans, and health insurance issuers in the in the individual and group markets.”

The HHS took action in response to President Donald Trump’s June 24, 2019 “Executive Order on Improving Price and Quality Transparency in American Healthcare to Put Patients First[2].”

These step seem to be progress toward making medical care costs easier to learn in advance. Such transparency may lead to lower costs and better service.

As I stated in a March 2019 Google Blogger post[3], the greatest need for healthcare reform is better preventive care that can enable us to live happier, healthier, longer lives with lower medical costs. But when persons do seek medical care, we like to get quality care at reasonable prices. More transparency about pricing and quality can help this happen.

United States Healthcare Costs
United States healthcare costs are the highest in the world per capita, yet millions still lack quality healthcare coverage.

To cite just one example of high United States healthcare costs, a March 14, 2019 BBC article[4] notes that U.S. retail prices for insulin and other costs of treating diabetes are much higher than in the other countries discussed in the BBC piece.

Closing Thoughts: Simplify Healthcare Costs?
In addition to making prices more transparent, it could simplify things and reduce paperwork if hospitals charged the same rate to all insurance companies, individuals, etc., while offering a certain amount of pro bono (free) care to the needy, especially for emergency cases.

As it is now, often insurance companies negotiate major discounts off the stated prices for procedures, while persons who lack insurance and have limited funds often are billed for the standard rates which may be double or triple what the insurance companies negotiate. To me, this seems unreasonable. If you disagree, please feel free to explain to me why.

Furthermore, insurance plans often provide many pages of documentation of what’s covered and what’s not. I’m guessing (and I admit this is not based on personal knowledge) that medical professionals may be tempted to perform an unnecessary medical test or procedure that is covered by a patient’s insurance to get revenue for the medical facility and staff. In contrast medical professionals may seek to avoid performing a procedure they find advisable due to insurance not covering it.

Ideally, we’d be better off if we either had health insurance that covered everything, were so healthy we needed no medical care, and/or had the funds and wisdom to pay for all our own healthcare needs without insurance.

We don’t live in this ideal world. But I think the Trump administration’s actions to get more transparency in medical care is a big step in the correct direction.

However, I am writing as an outsider. Is there something I’m missing that medical professionals and/or insurance professionals know?        

DISCLOSURE:
The author’s sisters both work for hospitals, one as a registered nurse and the other in the accounting area of a different hospital. But the author did not consult either of them for information when writing this piece.

ENDNOTES:



[1] “Trump Administration Announces Historic Price Transparency Requirements to Increase Competition and Lower Healthcare Costs for All Americans”; U.S. Department of Health & Human Services; November 15, 2019 press release; webpage accessed November 23, 2019; https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/2019/11/15/trump-administration-announces-historic-price-transparency-and-lower-healthcare-costs-for-all-americans.html

[2] Donald J. Trump; “Executive Order on Improving Price and Quality Transparency in American Healthcare to Put Patients First”; Whitehouse.gov; June 24, 2019; webpage accessed November 23, 2019; https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/executive-order-improving-price-quality-transparency-american-healthcare-put-patients-first/

[3] James Edwin Gibson; “True Healthcare Reform: Better Preventive Care;” Google Blogger; March 30, 2019; webpage accessed November 25, 2019; https://oneopinionsomeviews.blogspot.com/2019/03/true-health-care-reform-better.html

[4] Ritu Prasad; “The human cost of insulin in America”; BBC News; March 14, 2019; webpage accessed March 23, 2019; https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-47491964

NOTE:
This article being submitted to Google Blogger on November 25, 2019 is virtually identical to one the author submitted to Craft News Report, a website operated by his friend Paul Craft, on November 24, 2019.

No comments:

Post a Comment