Authored By: John Squeo – SVP, Providers & Healthcare Services
The inability of healthcare consumers to effectively research and compare healthcare costs along with quality is a barrier to achieving high health literacy and cost reduction.
Readily available information on the price of healthcare services, helps define the value of those services which enables patients to identify, compare, and choose providers that offer the desired level of value.
More than half of U.S. consumers don’t understand the healthcare system well enough to effectively navigate their healthcare benefit choices and services utilization. As the cost of healthcare and the portion paid by patients increases by nearly 10% a year, consumers want more choice and reliable information to make personal decisions. For the same, they would need information that will allow them to make informed healthcare decisions. Charges, Price and Cost are three main aspects of price transparency within healthcare. Charges are the amount set by the provider for services rendered before discounts and it is usually different than the actual amount paid by the consumers, whereas Price is the amount expected by the healthcare providers to receive from payers and patients, and Cost has a different meaning for entities that are incurring expenses (patient, provider, payer, employer) as shown below:
Fig1: Price Transparency would help patients to improve their understanding of costs, preventing surprise medical bills etc.
*OOPE (or Out-of-pocket expenditure) – Expenditure borne directly by a patient where insurance does not cover the full cost of the health good or service.
Price transparency in healthcare is about making consumers feel more Informed, prepared, and involved. It is the gateway to consumers autonomy that aims to give them more control through information, tools, and data access. For E.g. - they can better plan their finances by calculating their annual healthcare expenses.
Price Transparency can bring a seismic change of healthcare focus from utilization to prices
Fig 2: If appropriate Price transparency is not available below are the factors which would effect the consumers
Fig 3: Summarizes the current pressures consumers face and the need for more healthcare price transparency.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has been at the forefront since 2017 in their efforts to promote price transparency and ramp up compliance. To help consumers improve their understanding of costs, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued two final rules – hospital price transparency and transparency in coverage. In simple words, hospital price transparency helps consumers know the cost of a hospital item or service before receiving it and Transparency in coverage helps consumers know the cost of a covered item or service before receiving care.
The US federal hospital price transparency has come into effect since on January 1, 2021, and further extended into 3 phases. The first phase started in July 2022, when it was mandated for the health plans to provide machine-readable digital files for In-network Files (rates for all the services and items that are covered between the in-network providers and the plans) and Allowed Amount Files (billed charges and allowed amounts from and for the out-of-network providers).
Phase 2 is planned to start from Jan 1, 2023, and as per this, the health plans will have to provide consumers with an online shopping tool which will provide them with a personalized estimate of their out-of-pocket cost for 500 of the most shoppable items and services, as well as the negotiated rate between their provider and their plan. And from January 1, 2024, these shopping tools will also need to show the costs of any other procedures, medications, durable medical equipment, or services they may require.
A treatment cost estimator tool - The tool should generate personalized estimates, including OOP expenses (expenditure incurred directly by the patient), based on an individual’s plan, deductible, benefits, providers, network, and service location. The tool can also help health plans and providers collaborate and clarify the expected costs for creating single and bundled services, as well as set financial expectations with consumers.
A total of 2000 US hospitals were reviewed by patientrightsadvocate.org in August 2022, and it showed gradual improvement on the compliance levels of price transparency regulations from the survey done in February 2022. As per the report,
The survey also highlighted the current situation of the country’s three largest hospital systems, viz HCA Healthcare, Ascension and CommonSpirit Health. CommonSpirit Health owns 111 hospitals and among them, 45 are complying with the regulations, but Ascension and HCA Healthcare are still in zero compliance state.
Another June 2022 study with 6214 US hospitals showed regional variations in price transparency compliance rates. As per this report, hospitals in the Southern and Western regions are less compliant compared to those in other regions. Also, smaller hospitals showed lower compliance rates than the larger ones.
CMS is now taking actions against hospitals in non-compliance, including sending notices after CMS audits and requesting that providers share an action plan in a specified format within 90 days. There have been two instances of enforcement actions, including civil monetary penalty (CMP) notices issued by CMS for hospitals failing to meet the requirements, totaling penalties nearly $1.1M.
As part of their short-term compliance and long-term business and engagement strategies, provider organizations can make use of a machine-readable file and price transparency solutions in other strategic areas as shown in Figure 9.
Fig 4: Components of a provider organization's short-term and long-term price transparency strategy.
Technology plays a crucial role in helping healthcare reach its full potential in terms of price transparency. Interoperability and secure flow of information between healthcare providers and payers will be critical so that when a patient "shops" for services, the healthcare provider can access medical records and insurance records. Secondly, it can help consumers better understand their out-of-pocket costs and schedule the right bundle of services, so they get the care they want at the location of their choice. Additionally, tools such as price schedules and healthcare cost estimators can help healthcare providers and patients navigate the healthcare system with the same pricing information.
By pairing “high-tech” solutions with a “high-touch” approach to consumer engagement, healthcare providers and payers can make a lot of progress toward complying with the new rules
Beyond achieving compliance and improving the consumer experience, we see this movement as an opportunity. By pairing high-tech solutions with a high-touch, high-transparency approach to consumer engagement, healthcare providers and payers can make significant progress towards complying with the new price transparency rules, building greater rapport and loyalty with consumers, and standing out in their markets.
Additional benefits to payer and provider organizations who prioritize price transparency:
Differentiate with value-add services beyond rate and pay equity for providers