HCCI Releases New Data to Assess Health Care Markets Across the Country
Healthy Marketplace Index Measures Health Care Prices, Productivity, and Competition from 2011-2013; Allows for Local and National Comparisons to Assess Market “Health”
In an accompanying data brief and interactive mapping tool,
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Markets that rank consistently high in measures of price include |
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Markets that rank lowest are |
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Results for all of the HMI metrics are available in the 2015 Health Marketplace Index Report. |
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HCCI’s analysis also found stark differences between markets within the same state. For example, in
“No single measure can predict the health of a local market. However, the Healthy Marketplace Index gives us a much clearer picture of how health care systems are performing,” says
Additional findings from HCCI’s analysis of the HMI data include:
- Prices are not tied to health care use: You might expect that higher prices would be a barrier to use, but some markets have both high prices and high use. For example,
Denver, Colorado ;Greensboro, North Carolina ; andPalm Bay, Florida ; all rank high on both price and use for inpatient care. - Price patterns are not consistent: You might expect that if prices for inpatient care are higher than average, prices for outpatient care would also be higher. The HMI shows that this is not always the case: in some markets, prices actually diverge. In
Jacksonville, Florida ; for instance, outpatient prices are low while inpatient prices are high. Conversely, inMiami the opposite is true. - Association between inpatient services and health: In markets with higher utilization of inpatient services there tended to be lower rates of premature death. Whether inpatient services directly reduce mortality was not explicitly studied, however.
“The Healthy Marketplace Index succinctly characterizes some of the most important attributes of health care marketplaces that influence not only health outcomes, but also public and private spending on health care,” says
The HMI includes metrics related to three aspects of the economic environment of health care markets: price, productivity, and competition. The price indices use a common “basket” of health care services for inpatient care and outpatient care. The productivity index components include measure of population health and health care services use. Measures of hospital concentration, related to the competition aspects of markets, are also included in the HMI. Healthcare markets are defined by Core Based Statistical Areas for these analyses. The HMI covers the period from 2011 through 2013.
The 2015 Healthy Marketplace Index Report, accompanying data brief, and mapping tool will be available on the Health Care Cost Institute’s website on
During the design and construction of the HMI,
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Cory S. Capps , PhD, Partner,Bates White Economic Consulting ; -
Donald F. Cox , PhD, Senior Economist,Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation,U.S. Department of Health and Human Services ; -
Mary Jo Condon , MPPA, Senior Director,Midwest Health Initiative; and -
Raymond Scheppach PhD, Senior Lecturer at theBatten School of Leadership and Public Policy , Economic Fellow at theMiller Center for Public Affairs , University ofVirginia
Other individuals consulted during the project were:
- Stephen T Parente, PhD, Associate Dean, Professor of Finance and Director,
Medical Industry Leadership Institute at theCarlson School of Management , University ofMinnesota ; -
Bianca Frogner , PhD, Associate Professor, Family Medicine, University ofWashington ; -
Amanda Starc , PhD, Assistant Professor ofHealth Care Management ,The Wharton School , University ofPennsylvania ; and -
Christopher Ody , PhD, Research Assistant Professor of Strategy,Kellogg School of Management ,Northwestern University
The HMI results and report do not necessarily represent the views of the RWJF, the HMI advisory board, external experts, or their organizations.
The dataset for the HMI includes HCCI’s administrative claims data for over 40 million Americans per year with employer-sponsored insurance from 2011 to 2013, which accounts for more than 25 percent of the nation’s privately insured population. Additional data sources include 2013 and 2015 County Health Rankings and Roadmaps data, and the AHA Annual Survey Database for the years 2012 and 2013.
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