University of Basel: Private Patients Receive Treatment For Heart Conditions More Often Than Those With Basic Health Insurance
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Patients in
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While health insurers pay for treatments for basic insurance policyholders with a flat fee per case, hospitals can charge people with supplementary insurance additional fees, which in part benefit the medical staff. It has long been suspected that this might create financial incentives to offer unnecessary treatments to supplementary insurance holders.
Statistical analysis
A team of researchers from the
Roughly 105,000 treatments consisted of eight different cardiovascular interventions, such as widening narrowed coronary blood vessels or implanting a pacemaker. Of these, 64.4% were paid for by basic health insurance.
The researchers used statistical methods to analyze this extensive data set and look for differences that could be related to the insurance status of patients and could not be explained by other characteristics such as age, gender, comorbidities, or size and type of hospital.
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Supplementary insurance holders tend to receive more treatments
Overall, both basic insurance holders and people with supplementary private insurance tended to undergo an increasing number of interventions over the years of the study, except during the first two COVID-19 waves in 2020.
However, the likelihood of undergoing a cardiovascular intervention was 11% higher for supplementary insurance holders than for those with basic insurance. That's equivalent to 895 additional interventions per year in all of
"We observe a disparity in the treatments received by the two groups that cannot be explained by patient characteristics," says study author Dr. Tristan Struja. "Our data indicates that individuals with supplementary insurance receive treatments that are difficult to justify from a medical perspective and may potentially be unnecessary."
In fact, people with supplementary private insurance are typically better educated, possess higher disposable income, are healthier, and are admitted to hospitals less often than people who only have basic insurance. If anything, we would expect them to require fewer interventions.
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Rethinking the current system
The study authors do not believe the reasons for the differing treatment are clinical: "We assume that people with supplementary private insurance access medical care more often, in part because they spend more money on their health insurance," says Professor
The study authors say this leads to an inefficient allocation of health services. They recommend reconsidering the fees for private patients and redesigning incentives to focus more on quality of care.
Researchers from the
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Original publication
Tristan Struja,
Comparison of Cardiovascular Procedure Rates in Patients With Supplementary vs
JAMA Network Open (2023), doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.51965
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JOURNAL: JAMA Netw Open https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2800687
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Original text here: https://www.unibas.ch/en/News-Events/News/Uni-Research/Private-patients-receive-treatment-for-heart-conditions-more-often.html
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