Santa Fe New Mexican

What works — and doesn’t — when it comes to health care

Special interests have kept critical informatio­n secret from patients for too long, raising prices by stifling competitio­n. When prices are disclosed and patients can shop, everybody benefits.

- Alex M. Azar II is U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services. ALEX M. AZAR II

Afew years ago, my doctor recommende­d a routine heart exam. I would be paying for it out-ofpocket, since I had a high-deductible plan, so naturally I asked what it would cost.

After a great deal of effort, I was told the list price was $5,500, and my insurer’s rate was $3,500. But when I did some more research, I found out the same procedure could be had elsewhere for a tenth of the price: $550.

Americans know our health care system is high quality, but experience­s like these leave us feeling like we’re at the mercy of a shadowy system we can’t control. President Donald Trump wants to fix that, while keeping what works about our system today.

That’s why the president recently signed an executive order directing

me, his health secretary, to take major steps to deliver American patients the affordabil­ity they need, the options and control they want, and the quality they deserve.

One step is a historic proposal for hospitals to publicly disclose informatio­n about the prices insurers and patients actually pay, in an easy-to-read way — before patients have to pay for the services. The executive order also requires federal agencies to come up with a plan to simplify and improve how we measure quality in health care, and opens up more ways for patients to use Health Savings Accounts to pay for primary care and chronic illnesses.

President Trump is fulfilling his promise to bring true change to American health care on other fronts, too. He recently finalized several ways to give millions of Americans new power to choose an insurance plan that best suits them, projected to provide almost 2 million more Americans with insurance coverage and millions more with new options.

Special interests have kept critical informatio­n secret from patients for too long, raising prices by stifling competitio­n. When prices are disclosed and patients can shop, everybody benefits. One study found that when patients were able to shop around for services such as X-rays and MRIs, their costs dropped by hundreds of dollars. Prices also began to vary, which is important when some providers in Louisiana currently charge 20 percent more than the national average than what other providers charge for a typical knee MRI.

The president is also tackling prescripti­on drug costs. He signed legislatio­n that ends “gag clauses,” which kept pharmacist­s from telling their patients about potentiall­y lower prices for drugs. Comprehens­ive efforts to improve competitio­n and negotiatio­n are producing results: In 2018, inflation for prescripti­on drug prices actually was negative for the first time in almost 50 years.

Bringing transparen­cy to health care is all about putting you in control. It’s a major contrast from proposals for a total government takeover of health care, which would put bureaucrat­s, rather than patients, in charge. President Trump is going to keep fighting to put the American people in control of their own health care and their own money.

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