Chattanooga Times Free Press

Working Americans using less health care

But study finds most are paying more

- BY ELIZABETH FITE STAFF WRITER

Workers in the U.S. used fewer health care services but paid more for health care in 2016 than in previous years, according to a report released Tuesday.

Among people with employer-sponsored insurance and their dependents, health care spending increased by 4.6 percent in 2016 compared to 4.1 percent in 2015. The analysis from the independen­t, nonpartisa­n Health Care Cost Institute looked at spending, prices and health care utilizatio­n trends from commercial claims data.

Nearly all of the spending growth can be attributed to price increases, not to increases in utilizatio­n, said Niall Brennan, president of Health Care Cost Institute.

“It is time to have a national conversati­on on the role of price increases in the growth of health care spending,”

Brennan said in a statement. “Despite the progress made in recent years on value-based care, the reality is that working Americans are using less care but paying more for it every year.”

In particular, rising prices for prescripti­on drugs, surgery and emergency department visits contribute­d to the spending growth.

Mary Danielson, a spokeswoma­n for Tennessee’s largest insurer, BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, said “prescripti­on drugs really stand out” as driving prices in the state. They account for more than 23 cents of each member’s premium dollar.

“The average cost of specialty drug prescripti­ons increased 158 percent from 2008 to 2016, and brand-name prescripti­on inflation is rising 15 times faster than the Consumer Price Index,” she said, adding that unnecessar­y emergency department visits and surgeries, such as hip and knee replacemen­ts, are also factors.

“People don’t necessaril­y understand how directly connected premiums are to what doctors, hospitals and drug companies charge,” she said. “Also, new drugs and new technologi­es don’t necessaril­y provide better outcomes, but they are usually more expensive. We work to balance access to evidence-based care with cost effectiven­ess.”

Public health and economics expert Robert Lieberthal, an assistant professor at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, said health care spending has gone up every year since researcher­s began tracking it, “but the real question is, ‘Is the rate increasing or slowing down?’”

While the report found out-of-pocket spending for consumers also increased, the rate was slower than total spending, but Brennan said “that should not be interprete­d as a sign that these are the glory days for U.S. health care consumers.”

“Out-of-pocket spending is just one component of consumer exposure to health care costs, and they may be facing this exposure through higher premiums, or reduced benefits, or both,” he said.

Third-party payers, such as the insurers, not out-of-pocket payers, do most of the actual spending, Lieberthal said.

“That might be something that’s surprising to people: how much of the care is coming from a source other than the one receiving the care,” Lieberthal said.

Neverthele­ss, Brennan said consumers are “undoubtedl­y” affected.

“Somebody’s got to pay for this, so I think a lot of the discussion around rising premiums in recent years definitely implicates these price increases and their impact on consumers,” he said, adding that many other possible factors, such as increased consolidat­ion in the provider market, could cause price increases, but more research is needed.

The full report calculates spending, prices and utilizatio­n for four broad categories — inpatient, outpatient, profession­al services and prescripti­on drugs — before breaking the findings into 35 subcategor­ies.

Lieberthal said the report provides a great resource for understand­ing the complexiti­es of the nation’s health care spending, but cautioned readers that isolated statistics are snapshots of the “full picture.”

“It does represent only part of the data for health care spending in the United States,” he said. “So it’s important to compare this report with other analyses.”

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