High US Health-Care Spending and the Importance of Provider Payment Rates
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Abstract
We compare health care spending in the USA to other industrialized countries and find that payment rates for hospitals, physicians, and drugs are generally much higher in the USA than they are in other industrialized countries while the quantity of services – as measured by the number of physician visits, hospital days and prescriptions filled per capita – is relatively similar across countries. We then explore policy initiatives designed to control payment rates and volume of services and review the success and failures of these initiatives. Within the USA, the private sector pays significantly higher rates for hospital and physician services and drugs than the public sector. Thus, if the USA is going to reduce health care spending, it may be necessary to begin by reducing payment rates in the private sector. Options to achieve this goal are presented.
©2012 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- High US Health-Care Spending and the Importance of Provider Payment Rates
- Can Consumers Control Health-Care Costs?
- Eight Decades of Discouragement: The History of Health Care Cost Containment in the USA
- Both Symptom and Disease: Relating Medical Malpractice to Health-Care Costs
Articles in the same Issue
- High US Health-Care Spending and the Importance of Provider Payment Rates
- Can Consumers Control Health-Care Costs?
- Eight Decades of Discouragement: The History of Health Care Cost Containment in the USA
- Both Symptom and Disease: Relating Medical Malpractice to Health-Care Costs