• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

Previously-Woke Companies Retreat From Pride Month During Trump 2.0

June 2, 2025

Fed Offers Up Prediction That Spells Good News For Trump’s Economy

June 2, 2025

NAACP Accuses Musk Of Endangering Black Communities With Supercomputer Fumes

June 2, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Monday, June 2
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    Security video shows brazen sexual assault of California woman by homeless man

    October 24, 2023

    Woman makes disturbing discovery after her boyfriend chases away home intruder who stabbed him

    October 24, 2023

    Poll finds Americans overwhelmingly support Israel’s war on Hamas, but younger Americans defend Hamas

    October 24, 2023

    Off-duty pilot charged with 83 counts of attempted murder after allegedly trying to shut off engines midflight on Alaska Airlines

    October 23, 2023

    Leaked audio of Shelia Jackson Lee abusively cursing staffer

    October 22, 2023
  • Health

    Disparities In Cataract Care Are A Sorry Sight

    October 16, 2023

    Vaccine Stocks—Including Pfizer, Moderna, BioNTech And Novavax—Slide Amid Plummeting Demand

    October 16, 2023

    Long-term steroid use should be a last resort

    October 16, 2023

    Rite Aid Files For Bankruptcy With More ‘Underperforming Stores’ To Close

    October 16, 2023

    Who’s Still Dying From Complications Related To Covid-19?

    October 16, 2023
  • World

    New York Democrat Dan Goldman Accuses ‘Conservatives in the South’ of Holding Rallies with ‘Swastikas’

    October 13, 2023

    IDF Ret. Major General Describes Rushing to Save Son, Granddaughter During Hamas Invasion

    October 13, 2023

    Black Lives Matter Group Deletes Tweet Showing Support for Hamas 

    October 13, 2023

    AOC Denounces NYC Rally Cheering Hamas Terrorism: ‘Unacceptable’

    October 13, 2023

    L.A. Prosecutors Call Out Soros-Backed Gascón for Silence on Israel

    October 13, 2023
  • Business

    Previously-Woke Companies Retreat From Pride Month During Trump 2.0

    June 2, 2025

    Fed Offers Up Prediction That Spells Good News For Trump’s Economy

    June 2, 2025

    NAACP Accuses Musk Of Endangering Black Communities With Supercomputer Fumes

    June 2, 2025

    ‘Rest Assured’: Tariffs ‘Not Going Away’ Despite Court Rulings, Trump Commerce Sec Says

    June 1, 2025

    EXCLUSIVE: ‘The Man She Is Today’: European Companies Accused Of ‘Importing’ Woke Ideology

    May 29, 2025
  • Finance

    Ending China’s De Minimis Exception Brings 3 Benefits for Americans

    April 17, 2025

    The Trump Tariff Shock Should Push Indonesia to Reform Its Economy

    April 17, 2025

    Tariff Talks an Opportunity to Reinvigorate the Japan-US Alliance

    April 17, 2025

    How China’s Companies Are Responding to the US Trade War

    April 16, 2025

    The US Flip-flop Over H20 Chip Restrictions 

    April 16, 2025
  • Tech

    Cruz Confronts Zuckerberg on Pointless Warning for Child Porn Searches

    February 2, 2024

    FTX Abandons Plans to Relaunch Crypto Exchange, Commits to Full Repayment of Customers and Creditors

    February 2, 2024

    Elon Musk Proposes Tesla Reincorporates in Texas After Delaware Judge Voids Pay Package

    February 2, 2024

    Tesla’s Elon Musk Tops Disney’s Bob Iger as Most Overrated Chief Executive

    February 2, 2024

    Mark Zuckerberg’s Wealth Grew $84 Billion in 2023 as Pedophiles Target Children on Facebook, Instagram

    February 2, 2024
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Health»A Boon For Patients, A Bust For Hospitals?
Health

A Boon For Patients, A Bust For Hospitals?

May 31, 2023No Comments9 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
A Boon For Patients, A Bust For Hospitals?
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

While influencers advocate for healthcare price transparency, adherence lags among hospitals, unsurprisingly, as competing interests and increasing oversight signal shifts for the industry.

Fat Joe, perhaps most well-known for questioning, “What’s Luv?” in his 2001 summer smash, is embracing a new role nowadays: healthcare price transparency influencer. The rapper was in Washington, D.C., in April, 2023 as part of his ongoing advocacy work, speaking to policymakers and patients about better price transparency compliance and enforcement.

WASHINGTON, DC – APRIL 27: Fat Joe performs during “Power To The Patients” event in support of … [+] Healthcare Price Transparency at Sequoia on April 27, 2023 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Shannon Finney/Getty Images for Power to the Patients)

Getty Images for Power to the Patients

Part of what’s driving Fat Joe’s mission? Wanting to improve health equity and address disparities, with a wealth of data showing just how deep the divide is. Research from Yale and Stanford reveals the rise of recent medical debt lawsuits disproportionately affects Black and lower-income patients, where a 2021 U.S. Census Bureau survey found that Black and Hispanic populations were more likely to hold medical debt than their white and non-Hispanic household counterparts.

Another part of Fat Joe’s mission is wanting to ensure the mandates are effective.

And herein lie the problems.

Under the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Hospital Price Transparency final rule, hospitals have been required to post standard pricing information and payer-specific negotiated rates for the most common healthcare services since 2021. But in a healthcare system that incentivizes information asymmetry, the less the public knows about costs of services, the better economically positioned hospitals and health systems are.

Price transparency in healthcare: easy in theory, difficult in practice

Clock Out DC [@clockoutdc]. Instagram.

To be clear, these organizations should not be vilified for wanting to keep pricing information close to the vest; they’re not bad actors. They’re rational actors in a fee-for-service healthcare system, being asked to cooperate against their economic interests.

The question is, what should the path to compliance look like (for those hospitals that can’t afford to take the financial hit of the fines), and what happens next?

Hospital Price Transparency Compliance At A Slow Crawl

Having to reveal pricing information, while a boon to patients savvy enough to search for and find this information (easier said than done), is a challenging scenario for any hospital or health system. They’ve been brought up in an industry that competes on the clandestine. It’s also why, despite increasing fines for non-compliance, some studies show fewer than 25 percent of U.S. hospitals have complied with the mandate to date. And just how that compliance is taking shape is anything but uniform.

Survey data from PatientRightsAdvocate.org, as detailed in STAT in March 2023, found only 24.5% of 2,000 hospitals surveyed between December 2022, and January 2023, were posting complete pricing information. The likes of HCA Healthcare, Tenet Healthcare, Providence, UPMC, and other large medical centers had compliance rates of 0%. A separate CMS analysis, which looked at a smaller sample size of only 600 hospitals, found that 70 percent, or 420, were in compliance with website posting requirements.

As of April 2023, CMS issued more than 730 warning notices and 269 requests for CAPs, or corrective action plans, to hospitals that have yet to comply with pricing transparency mandates. But despite the hundreds of warnings, CMS has only imposed civil monetary penalties (CMPs) – or, fines – on four hospitals, as of April 2023. Importantly, CMS has raised the fee for noncompliance from more than $100,000 a year to more than $2 million per hospital – a financial burden many organizations won’t be able to bear, competitive advantage be damned.

What’s Behind Non-Compliance

On top of the hefty fines, one of the many reasons for hospitals’ noncompliance is the complexity of healthcare pricing overall. Prices for most people, for most healthcare services, will vary depending on the patient’s insurance coverage, the type of service provided, and the hospital’s negotiated rates with insurers. Some hospitals have argued that the required disclosures could be misleading to patients, as the actual costs of care may be different based on a variety of factors.

In this light, there have also been plenty of challenges in how hospitals present this information and the usability of the patient-focused websites in general. Different data formats, multiple costs being listed for a single procedure or service, and different codes being used to refer to one service are just some of the issues that Mary Katherine Wildeman, a health data journalist for the Associated Press, found when digging into hospital compliance in the state of Connecticut.

Another reason for hospital noncompliance is the lack of enforcement by regulators. Hospitals may not face immediate consequences for failing to comply with the regulations, leading some to prioritize other areas of compliance or investment over pricing transparency.

To become more timely and agile, CMS’ enforcement update notes that it is now leveraging “automation” to improve the speed and accuracy with which they conduct facility reviews. By using automation to group complaints based on file types and hospital systems, CMS says the number of comprehensive reviews conducted each month increased from 30-40 to over 200. Other enhancements in oversight include the enforcement of CAP completion deadlines, imposing CMPs earlier, and streamlining the compliance process overall.

Against Competitive Interests

But the crux of the noncompliance issue lies in the economics of the U.S. healthcare system. Hospitals simply aren’t incentivized enough to turn over their prices, agrees Sophia Tripoli, director of healthcare innovation for the advocacy group Families USA, who also called for lawmakers to codify the rule that’s been in effect since January 2021.

“It’s just about the business model of the sector, which is to keep prices hidden,” said Tripoli. “There is not a strong enough financial incentive or requirement to disclose prices,” she said, adding that hospitals should be prohibited from posting prices as a percentage of Medicare and gross charges.

Hal Andrews, CEO of data analytics firm Trilliant Health, agrees. “One of the longstanding issues that we’ve had in healthcare is that people thought competition was impolite, rude, was something not to be discussed,” said Andrews in a recent Trilliant Q&A. This thinking is especially ironic, noted Andrews, “because the people who are most focused on competition historically are the sisters of the Catholic healthcare systems for whom competition was essential.” It was the sisters who said, “no margin, no mission,” because they understood the business of healthcare in the U.S.

It’s important to note that transparency mandates extend to health plans as well. On January 1, 2023, the next phase of the Transparency in Coverage mandate and No Surprises Act legislation for health insurance plans went into effect, which requires most commercial insurers and group payers to provide out-of-pocket cost estimates for 500 items and services to health plan members. Similar to hospital mandates, health plans must make their price and rate information available, in a consumer-friendly format.

Price Transparency Driving Value-Based Care And Competition

For those hospitals and health systems charting the course to compliance – and those weighing the economic benefits with the costs – there are several steps to make the process as smooth as possible. One is to invest in technology and infrastructure that can accurately calculate and display pricing information. Hospitals and health systems should also be working with payers to ensure that patients receive accurate and timely information about their insurance coverage and out-of-pocket costs. Additionally, providers can educate patients about the benefits of pricing transparency and how it can help them make more informed decisions about their healthcare.

By providing patients with more information about the cost and quality of healthcare services, the hope is that patients will be empowered to make more informed decisions about their care. This could, in turn, drive hospitals to offer higher quality and more cost-effective care in order to attract and retain patients. Pricing transparency is also intended to support the shift towards value-based care by encouraging providers to focus on delivering higher-value services that meet patient needs at a reasonable cost. And for those more standard services, like an X-ray, where variability is minimal, the hope is patients will have the information available to make more cost-conscious decisions.

Again, that is the hope. The reality is that “consumer-friendly” formats of pricing datasets are as variable as each individual’s insurance coverage and financial circumstances. Negotiated rates hospitals post will rarely, if ever, be what most patients see on their bills, given the varying negotiated rates for each health plan, for each service, at each hospital location. This variability also includes plan deductibles, which put patients on the hook for costs up to a certain amount per their specific plan.

This complexity doesn’t mean that pricing transparency for hospitals and health plans isn’t a worthwhile endeavor. It simply means that, in a fee-for-service industry that’s trying to drive down costs and empower consumers, transparency mandates should be making hospital and health plan leaders reconsider how competitively advantaged they really are and what steps they need to take to be better.

What’s Next?

CMS is continuing to engage interested parties, including patients, consumer advocates, researchers and other experts, as well as hospitals, to obtain their feedback on the most useful and meaningful ways to display hospital standard charge information and exploring how to further drive standardized reporting of price transparency information.

Will this feedback, increased oversight and automation ultimately deliver more penalties and corrective action? One could hope that’s the case, though given the fundamentally competing interests of healthcare payers and providers, it remains to be seen.

See also  England’s Nurses To Strike Again After Rejecting Pay Deal
Boon bust Hospitals Patients
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

New Biden Admin Rule Is Boon To Insurance Companies At The Expense Of Consumers, Experts Say

April 2, 2024

Bidenomics Going Bust? Unemployment Is Rapidly Rising In Most US States As Election Looms

March 25, 2024

U.S. Government to Tie Federal Funding for Hospitals to Cybersecurity Compliance

January 12, 2024

Elon Musk Pledges to Donate X/Twitter War Revenues to Israeli Hospitals, Gaza Red Crescent

November 23, 2023
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Country Singer Kelsea Ballerini Defends Woke CMT Performance with Drag Queens

April 10, 2023

Haley Slams ‘Chinese Communists’ for ‘Sending Fentanyl Across Our Border’

July 1, 2023

How to Reduce Your Social Nervousness: 3 Simple Steps

January 17, 2024

Eric Stonestreet Boards ‘The Santa Clauses’ Season 2

February 24, 2023
Don't Miss

Previously-Woke Companies Retreat From Pride Month During Trump 2.0

Business June 2, 2025

This June, many Target stores will feature a section of American-themed apparel in place of…

Fed Offers Up Prediction That Spells Good News For Trump’s Economy

June 2, 2025

NAACP Accuses Musk Of Endangering Black Communities With Supercomputer Fumes

June 2, 2025

Nature Walks Can Transform Mental Health And Addiction Recovery

June 2, 2025
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,140)
  • Entertainment (4,220)
  • Finance (3,202)
  • Health (1,938)
  • Lifestyle (1,647)
  • Politics (3,084)
  • Sports (4,036)
  • Tech (2,006)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (3,944)
Our Picks

US regional bank shares bounce as debt ceiling overshadows crisis

May 16, 2023

Emerging Markets in Asia Are Rushing to Adopt Central Bank Digital Currencies

August 5, 2023

Tiny Steps for TAPI in the Taliban’s Afghanistan

January 16, 2025
Popular Posts

Previously-Woke Companies Retreat From Pride Month During Trump 2.0

June 2, 2025

Fed Offers Up Prediction That Spells Good News For Trump’s Economy

June 2, 2025

NAACP Accuses Musk Of Endangering Black Communities With Supercomputer Fumes

June 2, 2025
© 2025 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.