Health
Related: About this forumA $1,775 Doctor's Visit Cost About $350 in Maryland. Here's Why.
'For the past 18 months, while I was undergoing intensive physical therapy and many neurological tests after a complicated head injury, my friends would point to a silver lining: Now youll be able to write about your own bills. After all, Id spent the past decade as a journalist covering the often-bankrupting cost of U.S. medical care.
But my bills were, in fact, mostly totally reasonable.
Thats largely because I live in Washington, D.C., and received the majority of my care in next-door Maryland, the one state in the nation that controls what hospitals can charge for services and has a cap on spending growth.
Players in the health care world from hospitals to pharmaceutical manufacturers to doctors groups act as if the sky would fall if health care prices were regulated or spending capped. Instead, health care prices are determined by a dysfunctional market in which providers charge whatever they want and insurers or middlemen like pharmacy benefit managers negotiate them down to slightly less stratospheric levels.
But for decades, an independent state commission of health care experts in Maryland, appointed by the governor, has effectively told hospitals what each of them may charge, with a bit of leeway, requiring every insurer to reimburse a hospital at the same rate for a medical intervention in a system called all-payer rate setting. In 2014, Maryland also instituted a global cap and budget for each hospital in the state. Rather than being paid per test and procedure, hospitals would get a set amount of money for the entire year for patient care. The per capita hospital cost could rise only a small amount annually, forcing price increases to be circumspect.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/24/opinion/maryland-medical-bills-lower.html
rurallib
(63,187 posts)is when we have national health care
Docreed2003
(17,783 posts)Insurance companies control reimbursements, often with very tight holds on what they're willing to pay out for procedures and visits; doctors offices and hospitals are forced to increase what they are asking for from insurance companies in order to pay they're own bills : staff, overhead, etc, and in the process must take on more patients which limits quality of interactions with patients which leads to poor care and potentially more frequent complications. This cycle repeats every day in the healthcare world and it's the patient who ultimately suffers the consequences.