Medscape March 15, 2021
Kerry Dooley Young

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is trying to change the way patients choose their healthcare by encouraging consumers to use online tools to compare the costs of medical services, rather than rely on the current murky state of public information about healthcare costs.

Although the impact of the initiative is at this point unknown, even an initial spike in the amount of information available to consumers about healthcare costs could result in some extra work for primary care physicians, said Daniel Perlman, a consulting actuary with Milliman, who last year published a report on CMS’ Transparency in Coverage rule.

Patients who need spinal surgery, for example, might ask for help in understanding what other services, such as...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: CMS, Govt Agencies, Healthcare System, Patient / Consumer, Physician, Pricing / Spending, Primary care, Provider
Geneoscopy wins FDA approval for Labcorp-partnered colon cancer test
What the Data Show: Black Women Report More Pervasive Negative Experiences in Health Care Compared to Other Groups
Expanding Access to Telehealth for Medication Abortion Care
USPSTF now recommends starting breast cancer screening at age 40
Opinion: Listen: Why rehabilitation engineers need to listen to patients and their families

Share This Article