Lake County Record-Bee

How much health insurers pay for almost everything goes public

- By Julie Appleby CalMatters

Consumers, employers, and just about everyone else interested in health care prices will soon get an unpreceden­ted look at what insurers pay for care, perhaps helping answer a question that has long dogged those who buy insurance: Are we getting the best deal we can?

As of this week, (July 1) health insurers and self-insured employers must post on websites just about every price they've negotiated with providers for health care services, item by item. About the only thing excluded are the prices paid for prescripti­on drugs, except those administer­ed in hospitals or doctors' offices.

The federally required data release could affect future prices or even how employers contract for health care. Many will see for the first time how well their insurers are doing compared with others.

The new rules are far broader than those that went into effect last year requiring hospitals to post their negotiated rates for the public to see. Now insurers must post the amounts paid for “every physician in network, every hospital, every surgery center, every nursing facility,” said Jeffrey Leibach, a partner at the consulting firm Guidehouse.

“When you start doing the math, you're talking trillions of records,” he said. The fines the federal government could impose for noncomplia­nce are also heftier than the penalties that hospitals face.

Federal officials learned from the hospital experience and gave insurers more direction on what was expected, said Leibach. Insurers or self-insured employers could be fined as much as $100 a day for each violation, for each affected enrollee if they fail to provide the data. “Get your calculator out: All of a sudden you are in the millions pretty fast,” Leibach said.

Determined consumers, especially those with highdeduct­ible health plans, may try to dig in right away and use the data to try comparing what they will have to pay at different hospitals, clinics, or doctor offices for specific services.

But each database's enormous size may mean that most people “will find it very hard to use the data in a nuanced way,” said Katherine Baicker, dean of the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy.

At least at first. Entreprene­urs are expected to quickly translate the informatio­n into more user-friendly formats so it can be incorporat­ed into new or existing services that estimate costs for patients. And starting Jan. 1, the rules require insurers to provide online tools that will help people get upfront cost estimates for about 500 socalled “shoppable” services, meaning medical care they can schedule ahead of time. Once those things happen, “you'll at least have the options in front of you,” said Chris Severn, CEO of Turquoise Health, an online company that has posted price informatio­n made available under the rules for hospitals, although many hospitals have yet to comply.

With the addition of the insurers' data, sites like his will be able to drill down further into cost variation from one place to another or among insurers.

“If you're going to get an X-ray, you will be able to see that you can do it for $250 at this hospital, $75 at the imaging center down the road, or your specialist can do it in office for $25,” he said.

Everyone will know everyone else's business: for example, how much insurers Aetna and Humana pay the same surgery center for a knee replacemen­t.

The requiremen­ts stem from the Affordable Care Act and a 2019 executive order by then-President Donald Trump.

“These plans are supposed to be acting on behalf of employers in negotiatin­g good rates, and the little insight we have on that shows it has not happened,” said Elizabeth Mitchell, president and CEO of the Purchaser Business Group on Health, an affiliatio­n of employers who offer job-based health benefits to workers. “I do believe the dynamics are going to change.”

Other observers are more circumspec­t.

“Maybe at best this will reduce the wide variance of prices out there,” said Zack Cooper, director of health policy at the Yale University Institutio­n for Social and Policy Studies. “But it won't be unleashing a consumer revolution.”

 ?? 123LIGHT — GETTY IMAGES ?? Consumers, employers, and just about everyone else interested in health care prices will soon get an unpreceden­ted look at what insurers pay for care since disclosure­s became a requiremen­t Friday.
123LIGHT — GETTY IMAGES Consumers, employers, and just about everyone else interested in health care prices will soon get an unpreceden­ted look at what insurers pay for care since disclosure­s became a requiremen­t Friday.

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