Emergency room patients routinely overcharged, study finds
By a
A report of the study's findings, published in JAMA Internal Medicine on
"There are massive disparities in service costs across emergency rooms and that price gouging is the worst for the most vulnerable populations," says
For the study, Makary and his team obtained
The
In addition, using the 2013
The researchers then calculated each service bill's markup ratio, defined as the relationship between the billed charges and the
Makary and his team found that emergency departments charged anywhere from 1.0-12.6 times (
The researchers also analyzed billing information for 57,607 general internal medicine physicians 3,669 hospitals in all 50 states to determine whether any markup differences, and how much, existed between emergency medicine physicians practicing in a hospital's ER, and general internal medicine physicians who see patients at hospitals.
On average, charges were greater when a service was performed by an emergency medicine physician rather than a general internal medicine physician. Overall, general internal medicine physicians had an average markup ratio of 2.1 compared to the
Makary found that wound closure had the highest median markup ratio at 7.0, and interpreting head CT scans had the greatest within-hospital variation, with markup ratios ranging between 1.6 and 27.
For a physician interpretation of an electrocardiogram, the median
Overall, emergency departments that charged patients the most were more likely to be located in for-profit hospitals in the southeastern and Midwestern
Our study found that inequality is then further compounded on poor, minority groups, who are more likely to receive services from hospitals that charge the most," says Makary.
While the study was limited by lack of data on facility and technical fees also charged by the hospital, as well as lack of patients' insurance type and the actual amount patients ultimately paid, Makary says the study highlights the urgent need for legislation that will protect uninsured patients.
"This is a health care systems problem that requires state and federal legislation to protect patients.
Models such as the Maryland Waiver, Makary adds, where prices are set at the same rate no matter what hospital a patient goes to, can increase price transparency and protect patients. Currently, at least 7 states have passed some legislation to protect uninsured patients from paying so called charge master prices, a list of billable services developed and closely guarded by each hospital, noting prices that are usually highly inflated and charged mainly to uninsured and other "self pay" patients. However, Makary says a national model is necessary to unveil what is currently an inexplicably chaotic and opaque pricing system.
Keywords for this news article include: Hospital, Health Policy, Internal Medicine, Emergency Medicine,
Our reports deliver fact-based news of research and discoveries from around the world. Copyright 2017, NewsRx LLC



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