New
research from the Healthcare Bluebook (sponsored by the Ambulatory Surgery
Center Association) indicates the privately insured population saved $38
billion by using Ambulatory Surgery Centers (ASCs) instead of hospital
outpatient departments for day surgeries. That figure includes $5 billion of
lower out-of-pocket costs paid by patients directly.
What is remarkable is that only 48 percent of procedures
(such as joint replacement) that can currently be done in either setting are
actually done in ASCs. Assuming it would not be appropriate for three percent
of surgeries to be done at ASCs (due to complexity), the study estimates
shifting the balance of procedures to ASCs would save yet another $38 billion.
Plus, shifting other procedures, not currently done at ASCs, would save another
$56 billion.
Why are private insurers and employers leaving this money on
the table? The study points out hospitals are concentrated and have stronger
bargaining power over payers than ASCs do. So, why do not more ASCs open up?
Because ASCs are often owned by physicians, laws discriminate against them
versus non-profit hospitals. Although federal laws do not discriminate against
ASCs as badly as they do physician-owned hospitals, laws in some states prevent
new ASCs from entering markets to compete against hospitals. (See
this New Jersey law, for example.)
Nevertheless, insurers and employers should be able to do a
better job of getting rates down. The California Public Employees Retirement
System (CalPERS) reduced costs of joint replacement,
cataract surgery, and
arthroscopy by $6.4 million in two years by implementing “reference
pricing,” whereby high-quality settings with a wide range of fees were paid
the same reference price (based on the low-cost providers’ fees). If patients
wanted higher-cost facilities, they paid the difference out of pocket.
CalPERS’ reference pricing started in 2008. How can it not
be the norm today? Evidence continues to build that health
insurance does not add value, as it is currently designed in the U.S.
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