Literature DB >> 28264955

Reference Pricing Changes The 'Choice Architecture' Of Health Care For Consumers.

James C Robinson1, Timothy T Brown2, Christopher Whaley3.   

Abstract

Reference pricing in health insurance creates incentives for patients to select for nonemergency services providers that charge relatively low prices and still offer high quality of care. It changes the "choice architecture" by offering standard coverage if the patient chooses cost-effective providers but requires considerable consumer cost sharing if more expensive alternatives are selected. The short-term impact of reference pricing has been to shift patient volumes from hospital-based to freestanding surgical, diagnostic, imaging, and laboratory facilities. This article summarizes reference pricing's impacts to date on patient choice, provider prices, surgical complications, and employer spending and estimates its potential impacts if expanded to more services and a broader population. Reference pricing induces consumers to select lower-price alternatives for all of the forms of care studied, leading to significant reductions in prices paid and spending incurred by insurers and employers. The impact on consumer cost sharing is mixed, with some studies finding higher copayments and some lower. We conclude with a discussion of the incentives created for providers to redesign their clinical processes and for efficient providers to expand into price-sensitive markets. Over time, reference pricing may increase pressures for price competition and lead to further cost-reducing innovations in health care products and processes. Project HOPE—The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Consumers; Cost sharing; Innovation

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28264955     DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2016.1256

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)        ISSN: 0278-2715            Impact factor:   6.301


  5 in total

1.  If reference-based benefit designs work, why are they not widely adopted? Insurers and administrators not doing enough to address price variation.

Authors:  Dennis P Scanlon
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2020-03-29       Impact factor: 3.402

2.  Association of Reference Pricing with Drug Selection and Spending.

Authors:  James C Robinson; Christopher M Whaley; Timothy T Brown
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2017-08-17       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Do Chargemaster Prices Matter?: An Examination of Acute Care Hospital Profitability.

Authors:  Sebastian Linde; Leonard E Egede
Journal:  Med Care       Date:  2022-06-01       Impact factor: 3.178

4.  Reference-Based Benefits for Colonoscopy and Arthroscopy: Large Differences in Patient Payments Across Procedures but Similar Behavioral Responses.

Authors:  Timothy T Brown; Chaoran Guo; Christopher Whaley
Journal:  Med Care Res Rev       Date:  2018-08-13       Impact factor: 3.929

5.  Paying patients to use lower-priced providers.

Authors:  Christopher Whaley; Neeraj Sood; Michael Chernew; Leanne Metcalfe; Ateev Mehrotra
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2021-08-09       Impact factor: 3.734

  5 in total

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