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posted by martyb on Tuesday June 16 2020, @04:53PM   Printer-friendly
from the first-world-health-care? dept.

COVID-19 hospitalizations could mean significant out-of-pocket medical costs for many Americans:

For their study, the researchers analyzed out-of-pocket costs for pneumonia and other upper respiratory illness hospitalizations from January 2016 through August 2019 as a potential indicator of likely COVID-19 costs. The researchers found that these out-of-pocket costs were particularly high for so-called consumer-directed health plans -- which typically feature lower premiums, compared to standard plans, but higher deductibles that can be paid via tax-advantaged health savings accounts.

[...] Many big-name health insurers have voluntarily waived out-of-pocket cost sharing for COVID-19 treatment. However, employer-sponsored "self-insured" health insurance plans are not required to adhere to such waivers. Thus, tens of millions of Americans have high-deductible insurance plans that, in cases of COVID-19 hospitalization, may expose them to relatively high out-of-pocket costs.

[...] To get a sense of the likely cost burden on patients hospitalized for COVID-19, Eisenberg and colleagues examined de-identified insurance claims for 34,395 unique hospitalizations from January 2016 through August 2019. They looked at out-of-pocket costs incurred by people who had been hospitalized during the 2016-2019 study period with pneumonia, acute bronchitis, lower respiratory infections, and acute respiratory distress syndrome. (Claims data on actual COVID-19 cases were not available in the database at the time of the study.) The cases examined did not include those for people ages 65 and over, who are normally covered by Medicare. The out-of-pocket costs included deductible payments, copayments, and coinsurance payments.

The researchers found that average out-of-pocket spending for the 2016-2019 study period for these respiratory hospitalizations was $1,961 for patients with consumer-directed plans versus $1,653 for patients in traditional, usually smaller-deductible plans.

The out-of-pocket cost gap was lowest for older patients age 56 to 64, and greatest -- $2,237 vs. $1,685 -- for patients 21 and younger. The analysis was not designed to examine why the cost gap varied inversely with patient age, but one possible explanation proposed by the researchers was that, since younger patients are healthier on average, their hospitalizations may reflect more serious and thus more costly illness.

Journal Reference: Matthew D. Eisenberg, Colleen L. Barry, Cameron Schilling, Alene Kennedy-Hendricks. Financial Risk for COVID-19-like Respi- ratory Hospitalizations in Consumer-Directed Health Plans, American Journal of Preventive Medicine (2020), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2020.05.008


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 17 2020, @06:49PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 17 2020, @06:49PM (#1009237)

    Defense of my home from invasion by China or Russia. Pretty sure the costs of the standing armed forces are a little more expensive than my taxes are.

    Ability for me to go to four hundred square miles of forest and go walking. Pretty sure the cost of that is more than my taxes pay.

    Ability for me to travel from here at my work to home. Pretty sure the three miles of paved and pretty well-maintained asphalt would be more expensive than the taxes I pay.

    You can't convince me (vouchers or no) that privatizing all education would result in cheaper costs of education, sorry. Public schools are cheaper.

    I have access to a library of several thousand printed books and many more ebooks, much more than I can ever read or afford.

    I have clean and potable water on tap, and my sewage wastes are taken away without my worrying about them past my property line. (That despite everything Trump is trying to do...)

    If I do end up without insurance and homeless and somebody cracks me over the head with a baseball bat I don't have to worry that the emergency room is going to wait until I prove I have the ability to pay them.

    So honestly, you sound a lot like the protestors in Monty Python's Life of Brian. "But apart from better sanitation and medicine and education and irrigation and public health and roads and a freshwater system and baths and public order... what have the Romans done for us?"

    There's a long way to go, to. But let's first look at what we have.