Health costs are soaring in WA. Here's what may be behind that climb [The Seattle Times]
Dec. 12—Over the past decade, health insurance premiums for
Those were among the key findings in a preliminary report prepared by the state
Even before the economic disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic, health care costs grew at nearly double the rate of inflation, the
While
Responding to the report's findings on rising prices, industry leaders point to
"It's not like there's a magic pot of money someplace that is paying for those costs and that gap in government funding," said
Health care spending now accounts for more than a fifth of the state budget, even as average premiums for workers and businesses saw double-digit increases.
"The cost of health insurance has been the No. 1 small business problem for decades," said
A survey of 1,300 Washingtonians in
The same year, the Legislature tasked Kreidler and Attorney General
Though employers, including the
The report links growing costs to a rapid rise of health care mergers and acquisitions, as a handful of insurance companies, hospitals and providers take over large swathes of the health care market.
"
As of
From 1986 to 2017, the number of available hospital beds per 100,000 people nearly halved, while the percentage of beds in hospital systems increased from 19% to 73%.
"A decreasing resource became increasingly concentrated in systems," the
Consolidation has also led to a decline in the number of physicians working independently, according to the Insurance Commissioner's report. Eight systems now employ 65% of physicians and physician assistants in the state. Most of these systems also now own and operate hospital-affiliated clinics, free-standing clinics and other facilities.
"Generally, consolidations do not improve quality of care," Kriedler wrote. Rather they "drive up prices and impact access to care for patients and working conditions for providers."
At the same time, health insurance companies are increasingly taking over physician practices, pharmacies, labs, clinics and other health care delivery options.
More recently, private equity firms too have entered the fray, acquiring health care-related companies. Most of them took place in
While the report does not show whether such investments have hurt health care affordability in
"There is no question that mergers and consolidations can affect the delivery of high-quality care," said
The
An aging population that's sicker, technological advancements in care and a tight, unionized labor market has meant care now costs more to deliver care, said Zborowski, senior vice president of membership engagement and communications at WSHA.
"That is driving some of these costs, in addition to really rapid inflation for all the supplies and inputs that go into it," Zborowski said.
The challenge is that the report focuses solely on cost and affordability and does not acknowledge access or quality issues, which are also critically important, she continued.
"A lot of the consolidations that we've seen in
WSHA argued chronic underfunding of Medicaid and Medicare has led to a cost shift that private insurers are unwilling to take on, leaving increased costs to patients.
"Even when it comes to looking at how hospitals are reimbursed for their services, there's been a chronic underfunding of Medicaid and Medicare by the government," Zborowski said. "They do not pay the full cost of care."
To address rising costs, the report's authors described policies other states have adopted. Establishing health care spending targets linked to the larger economy, regulating drug prices and expanding oversight of rate increases emerged as top responses, as has taking on a portion of high-cost claims to lower health insurance premiums for individuals.
"It's not surprising that other states are more successful at holding the line on health care prices," said Dr.
"They have better enforcement tools," he said, advocating for a bill proposed last session to establish a cost transparency board that would help hold insurance companies accountable for exceeding cost growth benchmarks.
WSHA contends the proposed policy changes won't reduce out-of-pocket costs as much as the state would like.
"We would like to see the state look at other policy solutions with more proven ties to impacting the cost of care," Zborowski said. She suggested incentive payments for quality care and better funding for primary care, among other changes, would do more to address rising costs.
Rutman of the
WSHA argued the bill focuses too much on hospital systems consolidating and not enough on other players like health insurance companies and private equity firms.
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