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1.
Issue Brief (Commonw Fund) ; 3: 1-5, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25807591

ABSTRACT

The Affordable Care Act requires health insurers to justify rate increases that are 10 percent or more for nongrandfathered plans in the individual and small-group markets. Analyzing these filings for renewals taking effect from mid-2013 through mid-2014, this brief finds that the average rate increase submitted for review was 13 percent. Insurers attributed the great bulk of these larger rate increases to routine factors such as trends in medical costs. Most insurers did not attribute any portion of these medical cost trends to factors related to the Affordable Care Act. The ACA-related factors mentioned most often were nonmedical: the new federal taxes on insurers, and the fee for the transitional reinsurance program. On average, insurers that quantified any ACA impact attributed about a third of their larger rate increases to these new ACA assessments.


Subject(s)
Health Care Costs/trends , Insurance, Health/economics , Rate Setting and Review/trends , Health Care Reform/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Insurance Carriers , Insurance, Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act/economics , Rate Setting and Review/legislation & jurisprudence , United States
3.
Issue Brief (Commonw Fund) ; 35: 1-10, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24354047

ABSTRACT

The Affordable Care Act requires health insurers to justify rate increases of 10 percent or more for nongrandfathered plans in the individual and small-group markets. Analyzing these filings for rates taking effect from mid-2012 through mid-2013, insurers attributed the great bulk--three-quarters or more--of these larger rate increases to routine factors such as trends in medical costs. Insurers attributed only a very small portion of these medical cost trends to factors related to the Affordable Care Act. The ACA-related factor mentioned most often, but only in a third of the rate filings in this study, was the requirement to cover women's preventive and contraceptive services without patient cost-sharing. But, the insurers who point to this requirement or other ACA-related costs attributed only about 1 percentage point of their rate increases to the health reform law.


Subject(s)
Health Care Costs/trends , Insurance, Health/economics , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act/economics , Forecasting , Health Care Costs/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Insurance, Health/trends , Rate Setting and Review/legislation & jurisprudence , Rate Setting and Review/trends , United States
5.
Issue Brief (Commonw Fund) ; 16: 1-10, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23547336

ABSTRACT

This brief sets forth a set of policy options to improve the way health care providers are paid by Medicare. The authors suggest repealing Medicare's sustain­able growth rate (SGR) formula for physician fees and replacing it with a pay-for-value approach that would: 1) increase payments over time only for physicians and other provid­ers who participate in innovative care arrangements; 2) strengthen primary care and care teams; and 3) implement bundled payments for hospital-related care. These reforms would be adopted by Medicare, Medicaid, and private plans in the new insurance marketplaces, with the goal of accelerating innovation in care delivery throughout the health system. Together, these policies could more than offset the cost of repealing the SGR formula, saving $788 billion for the federal government over 10 years and $1.3 trillion nationwide. Savings also would accrue to state and local governments ($163 billion), private employ­ers ($91 billion), and households ($291 billion).


Subject(s)
Cost Control/methods , Health Care Costs/trends , Health Care Reform/economics , Medicare/economics , Medicare/trends , Rate Setting and Review/trends , Reimbursement Mechanisms/economics , Reimbursement Mechanisms/trends , Value-Based Purchasing/economics , Value-Based Purchasing/trends , Cooperative Behavior , Cost Control/trends , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Federal Government , Forecasting , Humans , Local Government , Medicaid , Primary Health Care/economics , Private Sector , Public Sector , State Government , United States
13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21614861

ABSTRACT

Lingering fallout--loss of jobs and employer coverage--from the great recession slowed demand for health care services but did little to slow aggressive competition by dominant hospital systems for well-insured patients, according to key findings from the Center for Studying Health System Change's (HSC) 2010 site visits to 12 nationally representative metropolitan communities. Hospitals with significant market clout continued to command high payment rate increases from private insurers, and tighter hospital-physician alignment heightened concerns about growing provider market power. High and rising premiums led to increasing employer adoption of consumer-driven health plans and continued increases in patient cost sharing, but the broader movement to educate and engage consumers in care decisions did not keep pace. State and local budget deficits led to some funding cuts for safety net providers, but an influx of federal stimulus funds increased support to community health centers and shored up Medicaid programs, allowing many people who lost private insurance because of job losses to remain covered. Hospitals, physicians and insurers generally viewed health reform coverage expansions favorably, but all worried about protecting revenues as reform requirements phase in.


Subject(s)
Economic Recession , Financial Management, Hospital/economics , Financing, Government/economics , Health Care Reform/economics , Health Care Sector/economics , Practice Management, Medical/economics , American Recovery and Reinvestment Act , Budgets , Community Health Centers , Community Participation , Cost Sharing/economics , Cost Sharing/trends , Economic Competition , Financing, Government/legislation & jurisprudence , Forecasting , Health Benefit Plans, Employee/economics , Health Benefit Plans, Employee/trends , Health Care Reform/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Care Sector/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Care Surveys , Health Promotion/methods , Hospital Administration/economics , Hospital-Physician Relations , Humans , Insurance Coverage/statistics & numerical data , Insurance Coverage/trends , Medicaid/economics , Primary Health Care/economics , Private Sector , Rate Setting and Review/trends , Reimbursement Mechanisms/economics , Reimbursement Mechanisms/trends , United States
16.
Issue Brief (Commonw Fund) ; 69: 1-14, 2009 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20614649

ABSTRACT

In an attempt to control rapid growth in hospital costs, beginning in the mid-1970s several states implemented rate-setting programs to regulate hospital payments. In seven states, rate-setting was in effect for a substantial period of time (14 years or more). While most of these programs were discontinued by the mid-1990s, two are still active. In five of the seven states, the rates of increase in hospital costs were lower than the corresponding national rates during the periods in which the regulation programs were in place. Four of the states--Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, and New Jersey--had some of the lowest rates of hospital cost increases among all the states. This indicates that hospital rate regulation may be a useful approach in managing a major component of health care spending.


Subject(s)
Cost Control/legislation & jurisprudence , Hospital Costs/legislation & jurisprudence , Rate Setting and Review/legislation & jurisprudence , Diagnosis-Related Groups , Economics, Hospital , Forecasting , Hospital Costs/trends , Humans , Rate Setting and Review/trends , State Government , United States
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