Healthcare DIVE August 9, 2023
Emily Olsen

The study, published in Health Affairs, found large national insurers had higher price ratios than other payers.

Dive Brief:

  • Hospital prices negotiated by insurers for their commercial plans are two- to three-times higher than Medicare Advantage plan prices at the same location for the same services, according to a new study published in Health Affairs.
  • The median commercial-to-MA price ratio in the same hospital was 1.8 for surgical and medical services, 2.4 for imaging, and 2.2 for laboratory tests and emergency department visits. On average, prices for commerical plans were betwen $660 and $707 more expensive than with MA.
  • Hospitals that were part of health systems, teaching institutions and large national insurers were associated with higher...

Today's Sponsors

Venturous
Got healthcare questions? Just ask Transcarent

Today's Sponsor

Venturous

 
Topics: Health System / Hospital, Healthcare System, Insurance, Medicare Advantage, Payer, Pricing / Spending, Provider, Survey / Study, Trends
Contributed Content: Everyone's Talking About Government Efficiency. Let's Apply That to Chronic Disease.
Clinical trial unearths hidden hypertension with automated searches of health records
How Intermountain Health’s cost-stewardship strategy sustains savings
OhioHealth’s plan for growth through ‘value’
Clearing The Crux: Five Paths To Achieve Health Policy Change In 2025

Share This Article