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High-Price Hospitals Bigger but Not Necessarily BetterHealth Affairs Study Finds High-Price Hospitals Tend to Be Larger, Belong to Systems with Large Market Share and Provide Specialized Services, but Quality Indicators MixedNews Release FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Conducted for NIHCR by researchers at the former Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), the study used 2011 claims data for active and retired nonelderly autoworkers and their dependents to examine prices paid by private health plans for 24,187 inpatient stays in 110 hospitals across 10 U.S. metropolitan areasBuffalo, N.Y.; Cleveland; Detroit; Flint, Mich.; Indianapolis; Kansas City; St. Louis; Toledo, Ohio; Warren, Mich.; and Youngstown, Ohio. Previous HSC research found that hospital prices paid by private health plans vary widely within communities, with the highest-price hospital in a market typically paid 60 percent more for the same inpatient services than the lowest-price hospital. The new Health Affairs study linked hospital-specific negotiated private health plan prices with detailed information on hospital characteristics to better understand differences between high- and low-price hospitals. Along with being larger and more likely to provide specialized services, such as Level I trauma care and heart transplants, high-price hospitals in the study tended to be major teaching hospitals; receive significant revenue from non-patient sources; treat more low-income patients, and have negative operating margins but positive total profit margins. Quality indicators for high-price hospitals were mixed. High-price hospitals fared much better than low-price hospitals in U.S. News & World Report rankings, which are based largely on reputation, but they generally scored worse on objective measures of quality, such as postsurgical mortality rates. “Our findings support both prevailing views about why prices vary so much among hospitalsmany high-price hospitals have unique characteristics that increase their costs, and they often have market power that allows them to negotiate high prices with private health plans and operate under little pressure to contain costs,” said Chapin White, Ph.D., a former HSC researcher now at RAND, and coauthor of the study with James D. Reschovsky, Ph.D., a former HSC researcher now at Mathematica Policy Research; and Amelia M. Bond, a former HSC analyst. Other key findings, detailed in the Health Affairs’ article, titled “Understanding Differences Between High- and Low-Price Hospitals: Implications for Efforts to Rein in Costs,” include:
The authors conclude that insurers may face resistance if they try to steer patients away from high-price hospitals because these facilities have good reputations and offer specialized services that may be unique in their markets. “Given the intense and growing pressure to rein in the growth in private health insurance premiums, the continuation of current trends appears to be unsustainable. It remains to be seen whether or not health plans will somehow regain the upper hand. If they do not, more radical approachessuch as state-based rate setting or restrictions on contracting arrangements between hospitals and health plansmay gain traction,” the article states.
The National Institute for Health Care Reform (NIHCR)is a nonpartisan, nonprofit 501 (c)(3)organization created by the International Union, UAW; Chrysler Group LLC; Ford Motor Company; and General Motors. Between 2009 and 2013, NIHCR contracted with the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) to conduct high-quality, objective research and policy analyses of the organization, financing and delivery of health care in the United States. HSC ceased operations on Dec. 31, 2013, after merging with Mathematica Policy Research, which assumed the HSC contract to complete NIHCR projects.
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