Health insurers take heat over high prices, but are hospitals the real villains?
Polls show the suspect in the ambush murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO
Half of the 1,026 college students surveyed by
The statistics are in line with an
Sen.
While it's easy to blame health insurance companies for ballooning health costs, there are plenty of questions regarding the role hospitals play in raising prices.
The
Meanwhile, hospitals collected
Ho said the data suggest "hospitals are overcharging patients." She said people should be more angry at hospitals instead of insurance companies.
Ho co-authored an
With those increases in profits came accusations of bad behavior by hospital systems.
In 2021, a 72-year-old
The hospital said it was a bill classification change from an office-based setting to a hospital-based setting. In other words, the same treatment would have cost
A
The billing increase is so bad that the federal government added pre-treatment approval requirements this year to tamp down on costs.
One problem could be the lack of independent physicians. The
The federal government may play a role in the problem, too.
A
Hospitals also benefited from federal COVID dollars, receiving about
While major hospital systems said inflation and the pandemic caused financial strain, a 2023
The study reported 75 percent of 4,423 hospitals had a positive net operating income in 2020 and 2021. Of those 3,337 hospitals that ended up in the black, 78 percent did it without COVID assistance. The authors also noted that 785 hospitals saw their financial situation go from negative to positive during that time.
Coming out of the pandemic, multiple hospital systems and insurance companies engaged in contract disputes over reimbursement rates.
While insurance companies were mostly blamed for the disputes, hospitals demanded higher reimbursement rates. Two high-profile disputes in
When the Thompson-led UnitedHealthcare negotiated with
Despite all the complaints about health insurance, the
Health insurance companies may not be the real villains.



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