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Healthcare Financial News - Study: Hospitals Charge Uninsured, Self-Pay Patients 2.5 Times What Other Health Insurers Pay

Healthcare Financial News


Wednesday, May 09, 2007
Study: Hospitals Charge Uninsured, Self-Pay Patients 2.5 Times What Other Health Insurers Pay

People who lack health insurance and those who pay for care out of their own pockets were charged on average 2.5 times more for hospital services in 2004 than what health insurers pay and three times more than Medicare-allowable costs, a leading health policy researcher reported in the May-June 2007 issue of Health Affairs. The gap between rates hospitals charge to self-pay patients and other payers has widened greatly since 1984, study author Gerard F. Anderson reports.

“Over time, the uninsured have been paying higher and higher prices for hospital care compared to what the insured population pays,” said Anderson, director of the Center for Hospital Finance and Management at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, Md. “The markup on hospital care for these individuals, especially for those who can afford it least, is unjustifiable.”

The ratio of what hospitals asked self-pay patients to pay and Medicare-allowable costs was 3.07 in 2004. Thus, for every $100 in Medicare-allowable costs, the average hospital charged a self-pay patient $307. For-profit hospitals had the highest charge-to-cost ratio, at 4.10, while public hospitals had a charge-to-cost ratio of 2.49. The markup of charges over costs was much greater in small urban hospitals than in rural hospitals--3.25 compared with 2.42.

posted on 5/9/2007 7:28:07 AM (CST)  Permalink