A trip to the doctor often comes with sticker shock these days. You may see an initial bill for $500 for an office visit, but your insurance claim shows they only paid $100 of that. This gap between healthcare charges and insurance reimbursements is a complex issue rooted in the economics of modern medicine.
The Chargemaster System
Hospitals and medical practices set their official rates via a “chargemaster” – an exhaustive list of thousands of billing codes and charges for every service, treatment, supply, etc. This chargemaster usually produces initial bills that are 2-10X higher than insurance reimbursements.
Some reasons chargemasters are set so high:
- Cover costs of treating uninsured patients
- Offset shortfalls from Medicaid/Medicare
- Subsidize new facilities, equipment and services
- Account for inflation and future costs
- Leave room for negotiating with insurers
The Insurance Reimbursement Game
Insurers never pay the full chargemaster prices. Through contracts and negotiations, insurers pay much lower pre-set rates for services based on:
- Medicare rates
- In-network provider agreements
- Allowable charges for a diagnosis
- Negotiated discounts off chargemaster prices
This back-and-forth leads to each provider having different reimbursement rates with each insurer. Often the initial bill reflects the inflated chargemaster while the final insurer payment is far lower.
Why Providers Set Such High Charges
Some reasons providers’ chargemaster rates are often double, triple or more the actual reimbursement:
- Cover shortfalls for Medicaid/Medicare patients
- Offset losses from treating uninsured patients
- Subsidize expanding services and technology
- Account for rising equipment, labor, drug costs
- Leave room to negotiate with insurers
- Take advantage of higher out-of-network reimbursements
Examples of the Charges vs. Reimbursements Gap
Here are some real-world examples of chargemaster prices versus average insurance reimbursements:
- Hip replacement surgery
- Chargemaster price: $39,000
- Reimbursement: $12,500
- C-section delivery
- Chargemaster price: $42,000
- Reimbursement: $14,500
- MRI of the brain
- Chargemaster price: $2,100
- Reimbursement: $450
While list prices often seem outrageous compared to what insurance pays, providers argue their reimbursements barely cover their actual costs and overhead these days. This contentious system has fueled intense debates over who is most at fault for rising medical costs.
Efforts to Fix the Dysfunctional System
There are movements towards charging sane, transparent prices patients can actually pay like:
- All-payer rate setting
- Government price controls
- Improved price transparency laws
- Increased insurer-provider negotiations
- More upfront patient cost estimates
But until sweeping reforms are enacted, the gap between initial charges and insurance reimbursements will likely persist. Patients are often left confused and frustrated by gigantic bills that their insurance ultimately takes care of for a fraction of the listed prices.
The real reason American health care is so expensive
FAQ
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