The Union Democrat

About one-fifth of US hospitals have been warned over secretive prices

- By JOHN TOZZI and TANAZ MEGHJANI

Some of the largest U.S. hospital chains and most prestigiou­s academic medical centers have violated federal rules by not posting the prices they charge for care, according to records obtained by Bloomberg News.

For-profit HCA Healthcare Inc., the nation’s largest hospital system, and big nonprofit operators including Ascension and Trinity Health have been cited for failing to make prices fully available to the public, enforcemen­t letters Bloomberg obtained through a public records request show. So have marquee facilities such as New York Presbyteri­an Weill Cornell Medical Center, Emory University Hospital and the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

The records reveal the challenges U.S. regulators face as they try to force long-hidden prices into the open to address decades of rising medical expenses. Since 2021, hospitals have been required to be more transparen­t about what they charge. However, government data show that among 1,750 hospitals regulators evaluated as of early December, about 1,300 facilities — nearly 20% of the hospitals in the U.S. — have been warned they violated rules.

Most corrected errors after they were pointed out, and officials charged with enforcing the rules say they’ve seen more hospitals complying. Regulators are also working to make the price data more useful.

“We want to hear from people about what’s working and what isn’t,” said Meena Seshamani, deputy director of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), in an interview.

Without better access to prices, it’s hard for patients to shop around for services. The opacity can even create risks for companies that pay for their employees’ care. Employers face potential legal exposure if they fail to adequately oversee the money they spend in employee health plans.

“As long as hospitals and insurance companies hide their prices, they can charge whatever they wan. And they are.”

— Cynthia Fisher, founder of Patients Rights Advocate

Critics say CMS still has work to do. A study published in JAMA Internal Medicine in September showed despite the push for transparen­cy, prices can be exceptiona­lly hard to pin down. Hospitals often give different estimates on their websites than the amounts they quote to patients over the phone, the researcher­s said.

“As long as hospitals and insurance companies hide their prices, they can charge whatever they want,” said Cynthia Fisher, founder of Patient Rights Advocate, a nonprofit that has promoted the transparen­cy policies. “And they are.”

Thousands of hospitals

The Trump administra­tion launched the price transparen­cy rule, and the policy survived legal challenges from the hospital industry. Since it took effect nearly three years ago, hospitals have been required to post files online that show their cash prices for many services, along with the payment rates they negotiate with private insurers.

The initial fines for not complying were low. CMS raised the maximum penalty to $2 million starting in 2022, boosting compliance. But the informatio­n is often inconsiste­nt and hard for patients to navigate, and challengin­g even for experts.

Fourteen hospitals have been publicly penalized after being warned about transparen­cy rule violations, and together have been fined about $4 million. Those facilities were only a fraction of those that have received letters or requests to fix violations.

The records obtained by Bloomberg showed some of the violations went to hospitals belonging to the following systems:

•HCA Healthcare

•Ascension

•Commonspir­it Health

•Trinity Health

•Providence

•SSM Health

•Steward Health Care

•Newyork-presbyteri­an•emory

University Hospital

•Hospital of the University of Pennsylvan­ia

•Northwell Health

•Baylor Scott & White Health

•Memorial Hermann Health System

The vast majority of those violations have been corrected, according to the records.

Bloomberg reached out to all the hospital systems named above. Those that responded said they are committed to improving transparen­cy and will continue to ensure patients have access to the most current pricing informatio­n so they can make informed health-care decisions.

Other hospitals said CMS had flagged minor violations, like files with formatting issues that were made in the early days of the program when hospitals were still learning how to navigate the new rules.

The government has yet to check whether thousands more are complying with the rules.

Slow progress

CMS is tightening enforcemen­t of existing rules and aims to make price informatio­n more useful. Meanwhile, new legislatio­n to strengthen transparen­cy rules passed the U.S. House this month with wide bipartisan support.

Consumers, employers and researcher­s benefit from the data, CMS’ Seshamani said. Insurance companies have used it to “identify hospitals that are cost outliers” and renegotiat­e contracts, she said.

Some critics say medical facilities are still dragging their feet. They’ve also argued that even hospitals that CMS deems compliant may not be providing useful informatio­n for companies and patients trying to understand their costs.

“Having a file on your website with partial or incomplete informatio­n doesn’t help an employer understand how their insurance competes,” Patient Rights Advocate’s Fisher said.

Hospitals are working with CMS to adhere to the rules, said Ariel Levin, director of policy at the American Hospital Associatio­n. However, some requiremen­ts are hard to meet because prices are determined by complicate­d formula, and in recent years health-care facilities were preoccupie­d with the COVID-19 crisis.

 ?? John E. Davidson
/ Getty Images /TNS ?? Emory University Hospital on Feb. 4, 2015, in Atlanta.
John E. Davidson / Getty Images /TNS Emory University Hospital on Feb. 4, 2015, in Atlanta.

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