Reproduced from a Kaiser Family Foundation report. Margin of error was ±3 percentage
points. Survey methodology. Chart: Axios Visuals
There is growing interest in the problem of surprise medical
bills in the media and
on Capitol Hill, with a bipartisan group of senators drafting legislation to crack down on the
problem. But the issue has not been prominent in midterm campaigns and is not showing up in campaign ads.
Why it matters: Recent
analyses, including polling and a report on employers' medical claims, show
that surprise bills could have as much — or even more — traction with the
public than other health issues being featured in the
midterms. In an election where health care is top-of-mind, candidates may be
missing an opportunity.
The big picture: As the
chart shows, unexpected medical bills are the number one health cost problem people
worry about, ahead of all the cost issues that get more attention, including
deductibles, drug costs, and premiums. They're even a bigger concern than other
family expenses, such as paying the rent, mortgage, or utilities.
- Surprise medical
bills also affect a lot of people. In a recent Kaiser Family
Foundation tracking poll, four in ten adults (39
percent) say they had a surprise bill from a doctor, hospital or lab in
the past year.
- 10 percent
report that an unexpected bill was from an out-of-network provider.
An analysis of large employer health plans showed that
a significant share of inpatient hospital admissions includes bills from
providers that aren't in the health plans’ networks. That leaves patients
subject to higher cost-sharing and potential additional bills from providers.
- Almost 18
percent of inpatient admissions result in non-network claims for patients
with large employer coverage.
- Even when
enrollees choose in-network facilities, 15 percent of admissions include a
bill from an out-of-network provider, such as a surgeon or an
anesthesiologist.
Surprise bills have the elements of a perfect campaign issue. There is a victim: consumers.
And a villain — providers — even if they argue that out-of-network
providers are necessary to ensure adequate access as networks shrink to reduce
costs.
There are a range of actions liberal or conservative candidates
can endorse to address the problem, as this Brookings Institution report shows.
One downside from a purely political perspective: neither
Republicans or Democrats created the problem of surprise bills, so it’s not a
great issue for candidates to attack their opponents on. Politicians will also
be mindful that providers will fight any efforts to limit balance billing, and
insurers will resist any attempt to stick them with all or part of the bill.
The bottom line: Unlike
consumers, experts do not generally put surprise bills at the top of their list
of the problems in the health system. But people talk about their unexpected
bills a lot, and with a sense of outrage. It’s the candidates who aren’t
talking about it on the campaign trail, and that’s almost certainly a missed
opportunity.
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