Eakinomics: The
Intersection of Health Policy and Economic Policy
It has been my experience that a lot of people believe that health and
health policy are “different” from other policy areas, and thus are either
immune to, or should be exempt from, the lessons of economic policy. I will
grant that the primary objective of health care, sustaining life itself, is
a bit more emotional and morally compelling than buying Twizzlers (well,
morally compelling anyway). But with nearly 20 percent of the economy
devoted to health care, it is dangerous to exempt it from the same
objectives of innovation, productivity growth, and price competition.
That is the broad lesson of “Hospital
Markets and the Effects of Consolidation” by AAF’s Tara O’Neill
Hayes and Kate Dixon. (Kate has since left AAF and is a podcast jockey in
Kansas.) The more particular lessons are that the most expensive part of
the nation’s health care bill — hospital care — is getting pricier, mergers
and consolidation are causing concentration to rise, prices are higher in
more concentrated areas, and quality doesn’t improve with concentration.
Let’s take these in turn.
Non-nerds are often surprised that 38.6 percent of personal health care
expenditures was attributable to care provided in hospitals in 2017,
compared to 32 percent for physician services provided outside the hospital
and only 11.3 percent for prescription drugs. Hospitals accounted
overall for roughly $1.1 trillion in spending that year. Despite this fact,
prescription drug prices get way more attention, presumably because only 3
percent of hospital costs are paid by patients out-of-pocket (OOP). In
contrast, OOP spending accounts for nearly 5 times as much (14 percent) of
drug spending. It is time to give hospital costs and quality comparable
policy attention.
The second key fact is that hospital mergers are rising. According to Hayes
and Dixon, “Between 1998 and 2018, there were 1,667 hospital mergers, but
the frequency has increased in the past decade: 66 percent of those mergers
occurred in 2006 or later. Further, roughly half of these mergers were
between hospitals in the same market, hindering competition. Between
2013 and 2017, the number of hospitals that were part of a hospital system
increased 5 percent.” It is time to rethink health policies from the
perspective of whether they are incentivizing concentration.
The increasing concentration has implications for the quality of
competition. The Health Care Cost Institute has done detailed work on
hospital market concentration. Its recent Healthy
Marketplace Index found that 72 percent of metropolitan
areas had highly concentrated hospital markets in 2016. It is not
surprising that prices are often higher, and sometimes profits too, in more
concentrated areas. But not always. “One study found that high prices may
simply reflect a more expensive (less efficient) cost structure: High-price
hospitals had operating margins (which measures revenue in excess of
daily expenses and is considered to be a measure of a business’s
efficiency) of negative 2.8 percent, while low-price hospitals had
operating margins of positive 1.5 percent.”
But perhaps the most depressing finding (Hayes specializes in depressing
findings) is that “study after study has
failed to document improvements in quality; rather, quality is often worse
in highly concentrated markets even while prices are higher.” One might
have thought the opposite: Consolidation is necessary to better
coordinate care and improve patient outcomes. That was the logic behind the
laws, regulations, and payment structures underneath Accountable Care
Organizations and Patient-Centered Medical Homes.
In short, health policy is not simply cookie-cutter economic policy. But
good health policy will include avoiding economic incentives for mergers,
concentration, higher prices, and reduced quality.
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