HARRIS MEYER February 13, 2020 06:00 PM
Per capita health spending for the 160 million
Americans in employer-sponsored health plans grew by 4.4% in 2018, the third
consecutive year of increases above 4%, according to the latest annual spending report by the Health Care Cost
Institute.
Medical price growth slowed to 2.6% in 2018 but
still accounted for most of the total spending increase. Higher prices
accounted for nearly three-quarters of spending growth between 2014 and 2018,
while increased utilization accounted for 21%.
Utilization rose 1.8% in 2018, the largest
increase in five years, with use of professional services showing the biggest
hike—3.1%.
Prescription drug prices jumped 3.6% in 2018, up
from 1.4% in 2017.
The average price of an inpatient admission rose
2%, down from nearly 4% a year between 2014 and 2017.
Outpatient visits and procedures showed the
sharpest price increase, rising 3.8% in 2018 but still below the 5.7% jump in
2017.
Patient out-of-pocket spending rose from $874 in
2017 to $907 in 2018, an increase of 3.8%.
Between 2014 and 2018, out-of-pocket spending
rose 14.5%, less than the 18.4% total spending jump during that period. The
increased out-of-pocket outlays were related to the growth in the number of
employer health plan members enrolled in high-deductible health plans, which
increased from 25.8% in 2014 to 33.5% in 2018.
While many policymakers focus on increased
spending in Medicare and Medicaid, data show the biggest per capita growth
rates have been for private employer-sponsored plans.
Niall Brennan, CEO of the Health Care Cost
Institute, said no one should view growth rates over 4% a year as representing
moderation in U.S. healthcare spending.
"I don't think 18% over five years is
moderate," he said. "The average American hasn't seen that big an
increase in their take-home pay. This is the third consecutive year of growth
in excess of 4%. You put those years together and you quickly end up with
significant increases in cost."
HCCI's report, based on claims data from four
large insurers, closely corresponds to the CMS Office of the Actuary's recent report on national health expenditures. It
found per capita spending on healthcare for all Americans, including those on
Medicare and Medicaid, rose 4% in 2018, up from 3.5% the year before.
The CMS reported medical price growth of 2.1% in
2018, up from 1.3% in 2017 — the fastest price growth since 2011.
Per member spending growth in 2018 was 6.7% for
employer plans, 4.2% for Medicare, and 2% for Medicaid, according to the CMS
report.
Still, some observers saw reason for hope in
HCCI's report, pointing to the finding of a modest slowdown in healthcare
prices..
"I believe public awareness and the efforts
of self-insured employers are putting a brake on the fast-increasing price
trend," said Ge Bai, an associate professor of health policy at Johns
Hopkins University who studies healthcare pricing. "The U.S. is the Mount
Everest of pricing around the world. But what we're seeing is a tiny bit of
hope."
She pointed to narrow network plans and more
aggressive payer negotiating tactics with providers, as well as political
pressure, as factors contributing to a more moderate pricing trend. Others cite
value-based payment programs.
But many experts fear increasing market consolidation by hospitals and
physicians, as well as continued price increases by drugmakers, may neuter such
cost-control efforts by private payers.
Bai noted that the HCCI's aggregate numbers mask
the disproportionate cost impact on people in employer-sponsored plans who need
a lot of medical care.
HCCI found that 20.2% of enrollees in employer
plans in 2018 had a diagnosis of at least one of five chronic conditions, such
as hypertension; an additional 5.8% were diagnosed with two or more of these
conditions.
Those with one chronic condition had average per
person spending of $9,187 in 2018, while those with two or more chronic
diagnoses had average spending of $20,762. That compared with average per
person spending of $3,755 for people with no chronic conditions.
"The problem is for sick patients,"
Bai said. "It's the cost exposure over time."
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