by Leslie Small
Fed up with rising
medical costs and the opacity of payer-provider rate negotiations, North
Carolina is shifting its health plan for state employees and teachers to a
reference-pricing model that ties payments for health care services to Medicare
rates.
The new rates for various
categories of services will average out to 177% of Medicare's fees, down from a
current average of 213%, North Carolina Treasurer Dale Folwell (R) told The Wall Street Journal.
Folwell expects the move to generate savings of $300 million, according to a
press release.
Between now and July 1,
2019, the state, through Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, will try
to enlist providers for its new network, according to North Carolina Health News.
"North Carolina is
unique in that they're trying to use reference pricing, which is not something
that we have seen most payers — almost any payers in the country, really —
embrace, other than Medicare," explains Caroline Pearson, a senior fellow
at NORC at the University of Chicago.
Jeff Dobro, M.D., U.S.
clinical services and innovation strategy leader for the consulting firm
Mercer, says North Carolina's strategy for its State Health Plan is both
"unusual and pretty aggressive."
"The first challenge
is not every hospital has to accept this," he says. Going from an average
of 213% of Medicare rates to 177% represents a significant cut, he points out.
Another major concern is
the risk to patients, who may still need to use hospitals and other facilities
that end up being out-of-network — and thus significantly more expensive — once
the State Health Plan revamps its provider network, Dobro says.
Pearson says she's
skeptical that North Carolina's move will spark a larger trend among private
insurers.
"Payers are always
trying to figure out ways to bring down prices, and payers always want to exert
as much leverage as they can on providers to bring down prices," Pearson
says. "The flip side is providers say that they're already taking very low
rates from Medicare and Medicaid and they need to sort of make up those rates
with commercial payers."
From Health Plan Weekly
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