Millions of Americans are struggling under the crushing weight of rapidly rising health care costs.
Runaway Growth of Health Costs
Over the past few decades, health care expenditures in the United States have skyrocketed.Out-of-pocket costs will also increase by an average of 4.6 percent annually through 2030 to reach 9 percent of total spending.
Who’s to Blame?
Why are people with health insurance increasingly faced with high medical debt? Is it a problem with health insurers or health care providers?It’s both, according to Pavani Rangachari, a professor of health care administration and public health director of the Master of Healthcare Administration program at the University of New Haven in Connecticut.
Unaffordable Costs Forcing Patients to Skip or Delay Care
A Federal Reserve survey found that, in 2022, about one-third of U.S. adults recently skipped or postponed medical care due to cost. The most frequently delayed care was dental, with 21 percent skipping dentist visits, followed by a visit to a specialist, with 16 percent saying they didn’t go.- 10 percent didn’t fill prescribed medication.
- 10 percent skipped follow-up appointments.
- 10 percent didn’t pursue needed mental health care.
Why Is It Becoming Unaffordable?
One factor contributing to the increasing unaffordability of care is due to the equation “price times quantity,” Ms. Rangachari said.Price
Providers can charge substantially higher rates for the same services to private insurers versus public plans such as Medicaid, Ms. Rangachari said. This allows them to negotiate selectively. For example, they may deny care for lower-paying Medicaid patients if reimbursements are deemed insufficient. This leaves uninsured and lower-income patients with fewer affordable options.Quantity
The quantity side of the affordability equation involves overused services, Ms. Rangachari said. Much unnecessary testing stems from fee-for-service models compensating volume over value. Each test, procedure, or patient visit triggers a separate payment.Value-Based Care as a Solution
Value-based care is one solution for repairing issues in the system, according to Ms. Rangachari. This model emphasizes patient outcomes over fee-for-service.“One big example is bundled payments for episodes of care, rather than just focusing on encounter-based care and paying for every service delivered,” she said.
Pharmaceuticals also bear the blame for health care’s cost spikes.
Applying value-based purchasing here could control pricing and supply issues, Ms. Rangachari said. CMS will increasingly scrutinize what value is delivered to justify cost, comparative efficacy, therapeutic advances, and research and development investments.
“And this is an initiative that’s now underway as a result of the Inflation Reduction Act,” Ms. Rangachari said. “Ultimately, it’s really tackling the p’s and the q’s of the equation through delivery system reform.”