Prices For Hip Replacement In US Vary Hugely
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Main Category: Bones / Orthopedics
Also Included In: Health Insurance / Medical Insurance; Medical Practice Management
Article Date: 12 Feb 2013 - 3:00 PST
Prices For Hip Replacement In US Vary Hugely
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A study that used "secret shopper" techniques to find out the price of a hip replacement in hospitals across the US finds a huge variation in price, by as much as a factor of ten, with many hospitals contacted not able to give an estimated price.
Reporting in the 11 Feburary online issue of JAMA Internal Medicine, researchers at the University of Iowa (UI) Health Care and Iowa City VA Medical Center say their findings highlight the difficulties American consumers face when trying to obtain prices for a common surgical procedure.
Consumers can get their hands on information about hospital quality reasonably easily in the US, but information on pricing is much harder to come by, according to the study, which suggests efforts to achieve greater transparency in pricing have largely been ineffective.
Lead author Jaime Rosenthal says in a statement:
"There have been many initiatives to increase pricing transparency, including state and federal laws, and still many hospitals are unable to provide price information for a common procedure."
Rosenthal, currently a senior at Washington University in St. Louis, conducted the research as a summer project at UI Carver College of Medicine.
For their study, the researchers randomly selected two hospitals from each state of the US, plus the District of Columbia, that performed total hip replacements. They also included 20 top orthopedic hospitals from the U.S. News & World Report rankings.
To find out what the hospitals would charge, Rosenthal pretended to be enquiring on behalf of a fictitious patient, a 62-year-old grandmother with no health insurance who would be paying for the procedure herself.
Rosenthal asked each hospital to provide the lowest "complete" price (that is physician plus hospital fees) for an elective total hip replacement.
When the hospital was only able to give an estimate for the hospital fee and not the physician fee, the researchers contacted an orthopedic surgery affiliated to the hospital to get an estimate of the physician fee.
The researchers contacted each hospital up to five times to get a quote.
The results show that 40% of the top-ranked orthopedic hospitals and 36% of those not in the top rankings were not able to provide an estimated price for a total hip replacement.
Plus, of those that could give an estimate, there was a tenfold difference between the lowest at $11,100 and the highest at $125,798.
Rosenthal describes the variation as "striking", particularly as they "tried to give each hospital identical information in terms of what the procedure would require".
Only 9 of the 20 top-ranked hospitals (45%) and 10 of the ones not in the top ranking (10%) were able to give a completed bundled price for the procedure.
The researchers were able to compile complete prices for another 3 top-ranked (15%) and 54 non-top-ranked (53%) by contacting the hospitals and the affiliated physician surgeries separately.
Putting these results together, the complete price ranged from $12,500 to $105,000 at top-ranked hospitals and from $11,100 to $125,798 at non- top-ranked hospitals.
The researchers couldn't find any specific hospital characteristics or reasons for why the higher prices were higher and the lower ones were lower, although they concede that their study only sampled a small number of hospitals.
Senior author Peter Cram, UI associate professor of internal medicine and director of the Division of General Internal Medicine, says:
"A big finding was the absolutely huge variation in price estimates."
"We believe that our results highlight the reality that hospitals have a very hard time knowing their own prices," he adds.
Rosenthal says the huge range in prices that they found suggests a "savvy" consumer would be able to shop around and make some significant savings.
"Our study suggests that it is important for consumers to ask for information about the cost of medical care and procedures and to be persistent," urges Rosenthal, adding that the message for policy makers and hospital managers is that they have a long way to go to improve their pricing transparency.
In an accompanying invited commentary, policy researchers Andrew Steinmetz and Ezekiel Emanuel of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, liken the current state of the US healthcare system to that of the retail car industry in the 1950s, where prices varied hugely among dealers, depending on what "exorbitant" charges were added for shipping, "preparation fees", and other spurious reasons without the buyer's knowledge.
"There is no justification for the inability to report a fee estimate, or a 12-fold price variation for a common elective procedure like a hip replacement," they write, predicting that eventually, healthcare providers will be travelling down the same path as the one car dealers were forced to take, with federal laws brought in to get them to disclose full pricing information.
Funds from the National Institutes of Health helped pay for the study.
In November 2012, a surgeon with the Loyola University Health System described using a new hip replacement strategy, an anterior approach technique, that allows the patient to experience less pain, have a quicker recovery, and improved mobility.
Written by Catharine Paddock PhD
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today
"What Does a Hip Replacement Cost?"; Andrew Steinmetz and Ezekiel J. Emanuel; JAMA Intern Med published online 11 Feb 2013; DOI;10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.465; Link to Article.
Additional source: University of Iowa Health Care.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)
Private Payments are Lopsided?
posted by Canadian on 26 Feb 2013 at 5:45 amHow is it that if a patient wants to pay for a procedure directly without insurance seems to be priced at a "list price" level.
My experience in open market conditions would seem to suggest that insured patient rates should be higher (due to the cost of insurance administration) than non-insured price quote.
How did the market conditions in the USA get so lopsided towards insurance carriers?
Help me to understand please.
I liken it to going out and buying a car with pure cash vs buying a car on a lease. You should be able to get a better total price based on the cash sale vs the lease sale. Am I wrong?
The difference may be teaching hospitals
posted by Jodi on 19 Feb 2013 at 7:10 amTeaching hospitals often have resident clinics for people without insurance. The procedure may very well be done by the surgeon who's teaching them, but the residents will do the workup and post-surgery visits and work with the surgeon during the procedure. Resident clinics are typically far cheaper than a regular clinic.
Hospitals Contacted Without Pricing Context Remains Invalid
posted by Hayden on 12 Feb 2013 at 9:01 amA simple less than detailed list of hospitals targeted by your study does nothing to support any claim of findings. This kind of anemic disclosure can only be viewed as amateurish speculation rather than the work of a true academic. Surely the time and effort expended deserves a clearer report, even as a mention in an article.
Re: "why Should Healthcare Be Different?"
posted by hmpierson on 12 Feb 2013 at 8:08 am1) As the article points out, hospitals make it very difficult to "shop around"
2) The consequences of a mistake on a heart transplant are slightly different than the consequences of making the wrong purchase decision on HDTV.
Hospitals contacted
posted by Jenny Hutchings on 12 Feb 2013 at 7:16 amYou can download the full list of the hospitals contacted from their article or through this link:
http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/data/Journals/INTEMED/0/IOI130016_supp.pdf (PDF)
Self invalidating Article without Examples
posted by Hayden on 12 Feb 2013 at 6:25 amYour article suggests that the hospitals are fictitious or at least deserve a warning shot ahead of any attack by shopping consumers. The car industry practice you mentioned in the "retail car industry in the 1950s" predated the MSRP Window Label requirement for industry disclosure. Are you calling for such a disclosure, or merely showing you support for the lack of it. Peeking under the lip is not blowing the lid off and results in an effort that goes no where.
What insurance pays
posted by Ben on 12 Feb 2013 at 5:47 amI'm not entirely surprised. The companion piece to this is probably known by most people that have insurance: the vast difference in what is charged for a medical procedure and what insurance actually pays. If I didn't have insurance I'm sure I would have to pay the charged price. It seems that for a given hospital or medical practice, they should know what a given procedure will cost (excluding any complications) and everyone, including insurance companies should pay the same price.
It makes sense
posted by Shawn on 12 Feb 2013 at 5:35 amThis is a very interesting article. I think part of the reason some hospitals don't like to release that information is because they don't want people to shop around. If all hospitals were required by law to divulge pricing information for this procedure, hospitals would have to be competitive with one another to drive down the cost- this would benefit consumers the most. Until then, hospitals can charge whatever they want and it's the consumers fault if they don't shop for the best bargains like they would on any goods- why should healthcare be different?
How much does it cost? How much ya got.?
posted by hmpierson on 12 Feb 2013 at 5:20 amReminds me of the scene in the Chevy Chase movie "Vacation" where Chevy Chase asks how much it's going to cost to fix his car. The mechanic slaps his palm with a 3 ft wrench, and says "How much ya got?"
This is indicative of why our medical costs are 20% of GDP. Until we get rid of the "for profit" medical model, costs, which are already double those of any other country, will only go up.
Contact the researchers directly
posted by Jenny Hutchings on 12 Feb 2013 at 4:39 amI'm afraid the individual costs for the hospitals were not released - you will need to contact the researchers directly for that information - you can find the contact details in the journal article which is free to access:
http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1569848#AuthorInformation
Lists?
posted by Johnny30303 on 12 Feb 2013 at 4:29 amWhy didn't you help us consumers by publishing your list(s)?
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