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- Access to Care Among Hispanics: Implications for Understanding Community Variation
- A Comparative Analysis of Small and Large Group Health Care Utilization and Costs, 1988-1990
- A Comparative Evaluation of Risk-Adjustment Methodologies for Profiling Physician Practice Efficiency
- Administrative Costs Associated with Third Party Payment
- Administrative Simplification Challenges and Opportunities: A Physician Organization's Perspective
- Alternative Models for Ensuring Access to Primary Medical Care in Nursing Facilities
- A Methodological Evaluation of Non-Response on the Physician Component of the Community
- An Academic Health Center and Public Health Practice Collaboration: Disseminating Continuous Quality Improvement Capability to Local and State Public Health Agencies
- Analysis of the Transfer of Risk and Clinical Management Responsibilities to Physician Organizations
- An Analysis of the Effects of Medical Underwriting
- An Early Portrait of Consumer-Directed Health Benefits: Design, Integration, Penetration, and Effects
- An Empirical Investigation of Employee Health Plan Choice and Switching Behavior Under Managed Competition
- An Evaluation of the Current and Potential Impact of Consumer Survey-Based Report Cards on the Health Care Market Place
- An Evaluation of the Impact of the New York Health Care Reform Act of 1996 on Selected Clinical Outcomes, Patient Satisfaction, and Health Status
- An Investigation of the Management Uses of Health-based Risk Adjustment Tools by U.S. Purchasers and Health Plans
- A Randomized Controlled Trial of Collaborative Care: An Alternative Model for Organizing Health Care Delivery in Teaching Hospitals
- Are Highly Concentrated Health Care Markets Bad for Health Care?
- Arkansas School Health Insurance Project (ASHIP)
- Assessing the Impact of a Public Report on Hospital Quality: A Controlled Experiment in the State of Wisconsin
- Assessing the Impact of Hospital Mergers
- Assessing the Impact of Medicaid Equalization Policies on Access to Nursing Home Care
- Assessment of Quality of Care Under PPS By Examining Patient Functional Status Through Post-Hospital Period -- A Feasibility Study
- Assessment of Training Needs for Public Health Financial Managers
- A Systematic Study of Nebraska’s Regional Public Health Agency Model
- Autologous Bone Marrow Transplantation (ABMT) and the Treatment of Breast Cancer: The U.S. Experience
- Barriers to Small-Group Purchasing Coalitions
- Beyond the Gatekeeper: How Managed Care Organizations Affect the Use of Technology
- Broadening Access to Prenatal Care through Expansions: The Impact on Prenatal Care Use and Infant Mortality
- Business Views of Strengths and Weaknesses of the Employer-Based System for Providing Health Insurance Coverage
- Californians' Health Insurance Coverage: Research for Public Policy Making and Planning
- Can Disease Management Control Costs?
- Capped Prescription Benefits and Medicare Managed Care
- Causes and Consequences of Change in Local Public Health Spending
- Causes and Consequences of the HMO Underwriting Cycle
- CCRCs: An Efficient Alternative for Long-Term Care Provision and Financing?
- Changes in Drug Payment and Management Strategies in Physician Organization
- Changes in Drug Utilization for Seniors without Prior Prescription Drug Insurance
- Changes in Employer-Offered Health Insurance: Firms Decision Making & Employee Satisfaction
- Changes in Hospital Configurations Between 1980 and 1995 in Urban America
- Changes in Physicians’ Decisions to Treat Medicaid Patients and the Uninsured
- Changing Medicaid Physician Fees: Effects on Access and Total Cost
- Characteristics and Determinants of Intragovernmental Activity Within State Public Health Systems
- Comparing the Cost Effectiveness of Chronic Care between Medicare Advantage and FFS Medicare Beneficiaries
- Comparison of Public Health Organizational Structures Using Dynamic Network Analysis
- Competition, Volume, and Outcome in Cardiovascular Care in California
- Competitive Bidding in the Federal Employees Health Benefit Plan
- Conditions of Practice and Quality of Care: Physicians' Perceptions
- Consequences of SCHIP for Household Well-Being
- Consumer Choice of Plans, Employer Contribution Policy, and Health Plan Price
- Controlling Risk Segmentation under Employment-based Medical Savings Accounts
- Corporate Finance and Consolidation in Health Care
- Cost, Utilization, and Health Effects of Successive Changes in Cesarean Length of Stay Policy
- Cost and Efficiency in Treating High-Cost Medicare Beneficiaries: The Role of Physician Practice and Health System Factors
- Cost Effectiveness, Quality and the Future of Medical Technology Assessment
- Costs and Benefits of Physician Practices' Interactions with Health Plans
- Creating and Sharing Improved Tools for Policymakers to Assess Risk Adjustment Approaches
- Defensive Medicine as a Response to Medical Malpractice Liability in the United States
- Defining Affordability for the Uninsured and People with Chronic Conditions
- Demonstration of the Subacute Care Alternative
- Developing and Applying a Descriptive Framework for Analyzing Food Safety Resources
- Developing Risk Assessment Tools for Large Employers and Testing Risk Adjustment Approaches in Health Care Purchasing
- Does Hospice Save Medicare Money?
- Does Managed Care Work? An Empirical Study of Corporate Healthcare Cost Containment Initiatives
- Duration Limitations and Adherence to Chronic Medication
- Early Implementation Experience of Companies Offering internet-based Models for Employer Health Benefits
- Economic Impact of Adverse Health Events on the Uninsured Near Elderly
- Effect of Decreased Emergency Department Access on Patient Outcomes
- Effect of State Parity Laws on Children with Mental Health Care Needs
- Effects of a Statewide Perinatal Program for the Uninsured
- Effects of Competition and Rate Regulation on Access to Physician Services and Uncompensated Care
- Effects of Different Mechanisms on Pharmaceutical Use and Cost
- Effects of Physician Compensation Method on Physician Behavior and Satisfaction in Managed Care Organizations
- Effects of Prior Authorization of New Medications among Medicaid Beneficiaries with Bipolar Disorder
- Effects of the Balanced Budget Act and Market Forces on the Health Safety Net
- Efficiency/Quality/Outcome Trade-offs in Medicare's Prospective Payment System
- Enhancing Access to Obstetrical Care: An Evaluation of A Change in Medicaid Payment Policy
- Establishing the Value of Stable Prescription Coverage for Medicare Beneficiaries
- Evaluate Selective Contracting for Tertiary Services by Managed Care Organizations
- Evaluating Business Initiatives in Health Care Purchasing
- Evaluating Cost Efficiency of Specialist Physicians
- Evaluating Florida's Medicaid Provider Service Network Demonstration Project
- Evaluating the Medicaid Psychiatric Hospital Payment System in New Hampshire
- Evaluating the Use of Performance-Related Information and Financial Incentives in Employer Health Care Purchasing
- Evaluation of Baltimore's Mental Health Capitation Program
- Evaluation of Defined Contribution Plans on Health Insurance Choice and Medical Care Use
- Evaluation of Maine's Dirigo Health Reform
- Evaluation of Medicare's Local Medical Review Policies for New Medical Technologies
- Evaluation of Natural Experiment to Raise Medicaid Fees for Physicians
- Evaluation of New York City Model to Provide Home Care Services: The Cluster Care Demonstration
- Evaluation of Reforms of the Market for Individual Health Insurance Coverage in New Jersey
- Evaluation of State Initiatives to Expand Health Insurance Among Small Businesses
- Evaluation of State Risk Pools: The Current and Potential Experience
- Evaluation of the Buyers Health Care Action Group (BHCAG) Initiative Component Three: An Assessment of the Impact of the Initiative on Health Care Delivery
- Evaluation of the Buyers Health Care Action Group Initiative
- Evaluation of the Effects of Utilization Review on Patterns of Care and Medical Expenses
- Evaluation of the Impact of the Resource Utilization Groups II System on Long-Term Care Facilities in New York
- Evaluation of the Medicare Supplementary Insurance Reform Legislation of 1990
- Evaluation of the TennCare Health Reform Plan
- Evolution of Physician Organization Under Managed Care
- Evolution of Self-Insurance in an Era of Managed Care
- Examining Effective Strategies that Local Communities Have Used to Meet Expanded Public Health Workforce Needs
- Examining the Impact of Informational Messages on Seniors' Choice of Medicare Drug Plans
- Excess Capacity, Hospital Costs, and the Effects of Market Structure
- Exit, Voice and Frailty: Consumer Behavior Under Managed Competition
- Exploration of Market-Based Risk Adjustments for Adverse Selection in Health Insurance
- Extent and Impact of the Use of Observations Stays in the Medicare Program
- Factors Affecting End-of-Life Care for Beneficiaries Who Are Dually Eligible for Medicare and Medicaid
- Factors Associated With Health Insurance Coverage for Low-Income Children
- Factors Associated with the Distribution of Physician Income: A Quantile Regression Approach
- Financing American Indian Health Care: Impacts and Options for Improving Access and Quality of Care
- Gender and Managed Care
- Geographic Variation in Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Services Utilization: What is the Role of Physician Practice Patterns?
- Getting Tools Used: Lessons Learned from Successful Decision Support Tools Unrelated to Health Care
- Guaranteed Renewability in Individual and Group Health Insurance: Functioning and Future Prospects
- Health and Economic Consequences of Medicaid Disenrollment in New York City
- Health Care Services for Children Placed in Foster or Kinship Care
- Health Care Utilization Among the Previously Uninsured
- Health Care Utilization Among the Previously Uninsured-- A Feasibility Study
- Health Insurance Purchasing Cooperatives: Analysis of Existing Data
- Health Plan Choice and Utilization: The Role of Plan Attributes
- Health Plan Choices and Adverse Selection in Employer Sponsored InsuranceHealth Plan Choices and Adverse Selection in Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance
- Health Plan Selection for Medicare Eligible Enrollees in the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program
- Health Savings Accounts, High Deductible Policies, and the Uninsured: Simulating the Effects of HSA Tax Policy
- HIPC Health Risk Adjusters Project
- Hospital Capital Financing in the Era of Quality and Safety: Strategies and Priorities for the Future - A Survey of CEOs
- Hospital Contracting Under Managed Care
- Hospital Mergers and Health Reform: Decreased Competition Versus Community Benefit
- Hospital Ownership and Performance: An Integrative Research Review
- Hospital Ownership Conversions
- Hospital Responses to Competitive and Regulatory Pressures: The Role of Organizational Form in Changing Markets
- Hospital Uncompensated Care Under Managed Care, Competition and Fiscal Pressure
- How Does Fragmentation of Care Contribute to the Costs of Care?
- How Do Rising Healthcare Costs Affect Worker Compensation?
- How Managed Care Growth Has Affected Health Departments’ and Physicians’ Ability to Provide Indigent Care
- How Valid are the Assumptions Underlying Consumer-Driven Health Plans?
- Impact of Medicaid Managed Care on Access to Care and Service Use
- Impact of Medicare
- Impact of Medicare Payment Reductions For "Overpriced" Surgical Procedures on Utilization and Access
- Impact of MMA Part D on Medicare Residents in Nursing Homes
- Impact of Physician Compensation Mechanisms on the Process of Care
- Impact of Private Long-term Care Insurance on Demand for Care: Setting and Intensity
- Impact of Profitability on Hospital Responses to Financial Stress
- Impact of State Medicaid Policy Changes on Nursing Home Hospitalization
- Impact of the Medicare Home Health Prospective Payment System on Beneficiaries and Program Costs
- Impact of the Washington State Diabetes Collaborative on Patient Health and Economic Outcomes
- Impact of Various Health System Reform Options on the Distribution of Health Care Costs Across All Payers
- Implementation and Impact of Health Based Risk Adjustment
- Implementing Diagnostic Health Risk Adjustment in an Employed Population -- Phase II
- Implementing Risk-Adjustment for Medicaid
- Improving Access to Improve Quality: Evaluation of an Organizational Innovation
- Incorporating Disparities into State Strategies to Monitor and Improve Health Status
- Information Technologies and the Use of Information in Managed Care
- Informing the Design of Funding Allocation Formulas in Public Health
- Insurance Coverage, Use of Prenatal Care, and the Financing of Birth Outcomes in Nine States Pre and Post Welfare Reform
- Investigation into Specialty Payment: Effects on Cost and Treatments
- Involving Consumers in Physician Choice: Making Data into Useable Information for Chronically Ill Patients in Consumer-Directed Health Plans
- Is Small-Area Variation in Healthcare Utilization Explained by Physician Financial Self-Interest?
- Is the Impact of Managed Care on Hospital Prices Decreasing?
- Liability Problems and Transparent Disclosure to Patients as a Solution
- Local Community Strategies to Develop their Public Health Surge Capacity to Handle Emergencies Affecting Many People
- Local Funding for Health Services in Rural Counties
- Local Public Health Capacities to Address the Needs of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Populations
- Long-Term Care Options Planning Project
- Long-Term Care Options Project (Planning Grant)
- Managed Care: Contractual Arrangements with Physicians and Implications for Pediatric Health Care Use
- Managed Care and Medicare Expenditures
- Managed Care’s Spillover Effects on the Quality of Diabetes Care for Medicare Patients
- Market-Based Reforms and the Quality of Hospital Care in New Jersey
- Market Forces in Investor-Owned Health Maintenance Organizations
- Measuring Managed Care Activity
- Measuring the Costs and Benefits of Medicare Private Fee-for-Service
- Measuring the Costs of Defensive Medicine in the United States: Phase II
- Measuring the Value of Public Health Systems
- Medicaid Eligibility Expansions for Pregnant Women, 1986-1990: Evaluating the Aggressiveness of States' Implementation
- Medicaid Long-Term Care Programs: Simulating Rate Setting and Cross-Payer Effects
- Medicaid Managed Care and Health Care Access, Use, and Quality
- Medical Malpractice Reform and Implications for Health Insurance Costs
- Medical Risk Distribution Among Competing Health Plans
- Medical Spending and Health of the Elderly
- Medicare Health Plan Decisions: Will Regional Competitive Bidding Work?
- Medicare Policy and Aging in the US and Canada
- Medicare Risk-Contracting: Impact on Access and Quality for Medicare HMO Enrollees and Vulnerable Populations
- Medicare Spending, Disparities, and Returns to Healthy Behaviors
- Meeting the Future Long-Term Care Needs of the Baby Boomers: How the Changing Structure of Families Will Affect Paid Helpers and Institutions
- Methods to Present Quality Information to Assist Consumers to Make Health Plan Decisions
- Monitoring and Evaluation of Massachusetts's Chapter 495
- Monitoring the Early Experience with Federal Health Insurance Tax Credits
- National Security and Child Health: Reexamining the Role of Medicaid and EPSDT
- New Approaches to Identifying Market Power in Health Care
- New York State ProNet (Prospectively Paid Health Network)
- Older American's Health Insurance: Emerging Concerns
- Patterns of Individual Coverage
- Paying Physician Group Practices for Quality: A Regional Natural Experiment
- Peer Pressure: Hospital Ownership Mix and Medical Service Provision
- Physician-Organization Arrangements: Impact on Integration and Managed Care
- Physician Compensation & Risk Bearing Arrangements in Medical Groups: Market Level Effects and Impacts on Physician Productivity and Risk Contracting
- Physician Compensation and Risk-Bearing Arrangements in Medical Groups: Impact on Physician Productivity
- Physician Responses to HMO Growth
- Physician Response to Medicare Payment Reductions: Impacts on the Public and Private Sectors
- Physicians' Responses to Variations in Medicare Fees for Specific Services
- Pilot Study of Variations in Medicare Spending per Beneficiary
- Preferences, Choices, and Managed Care Markets: Determinants of Consumer Trust and Satisfaction
- Premium Variation and Insurance Demand in the Individual Insurance Market
- Prescription Benefit Comprehensiveness and Costs of Care in Elderly Persons with Chronic Illness: The Medicare Enrollee Drug Study (MEDS)
- Private Insurance Markets: The Missing Link-Association Health Plans and Other Pooled Purchasing Arrangements
- Promoting Readiness and Interest in Self Management
- Public Health Entrepreneurship
- Public Health Funding and Population Health
- Public Health System Organization and Performance in Rural Communities
- Quality Assessment of South Carolina Medicaid Managed Care
- Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Health Care Among the Insured
- Reforming Medicare Risk Payment Through Competitive Market Forces
- Reimbursement Policy and Cancer Chemotherapy Treatment and Outcomes
- Research on Determinants of Hospital Contracts with HMOs
- Research on Risk Selection in Employer-sponsored Health Insurance
- Research on the Effect of Community Variability on Financing Strategy Effectiveness
- Research on the Governance and Management of Collective Purchasing Arrangements Under Managed Competition
- Research on the Impact of Physician Competition on Health Care Utilization
- Research on the Relationship Between Market Characteristics and the Number and Type of Medicare Enrollees in HMOs
- Resource Use and Efficiency in Episodes of Care
- Second-Generation Evaluation of Buyers Health Care Action Group (BHCAG)
- Single Payer Demonstration Project
- Small Area Variation in Medicaid Utilization and Expenditures: Implications for Cost Containment and Quality of Care
- Sources of Health Care Cost Growth
- State Experience with Pharmaceutical Assistance Programs
- State Health Policy and the State of American Medicine
- Strategies to Reduce Health Care Providers’ Administrative Burden Related to Quality Performance Measurement and Reporting
- Structural Capacities, Processes and Performance of Essential Public Health Services by Small Local Public Health Systems
- Studies of the Working Uninsured, Their Dependents and Insurance Reform on Their Behalf
- Study of the Effects of High-Deductible Health Plans on Families with Chronic Conditions
- Study on Informed Choice of Drug Coverage for Medicare Beneficiaries
- Survey to Begin Assessment of HIPC Risk Adjustment Mechanism
- Surviving the Perfect Storm: Impacts of Benefit Reductions and Increased Cost Sharing in a Medicaid Program
- Sustaining Individual Health Insurance Markets Under Community Rating and Open Enrollment
- Testing the Value of Patient-reported Physician Quality Information for Quality Improvement and Consumer Choice
- The Anatomy of ERISA Health Plans: Describing their Basic Structure and Key Areas of Variation
- The Costs and Benefits of Health Information Technology: Computerized Physician Order Entry
- The Dynamics of Health Insurance Coverage: 1996 to 2000
- The Dynamics of Spells Without Health Insurance
- The Economics of Health Information Technology in Physician Organizations
- The Effect of a Physician Gatekeeper on the Cost of, Access to, and Quality of Care in an Employed Population
- The Effect of Expanding Medicaid Coverage to Poor Uninsured Women on Maternal and Infant Health Outcomes
- The Effect of Expanding Medicaid Coverage to Poor Uninsured Women on Maternal and Infant Health Outcomes -- Planning Grant
- The Effect of Hospital Mergers on HMO Hospital Costs and Premiums, 1995-2001
- The Effect of Local Hospital Networks on the Cost and Accessibility of Hospital Services
- The Effect of Managed Care on Treatment Patterns and Health Outcomes Among Traditional Medicare Patients
- The Effect of Price on Health Plan Choices of Retirees
- The Effects of Any Willing Provider Laws
- The Effects of Health Plan Concentration on Hospital Prices, Costs, Capacity, Charity Care, and Outcomes
- The Effects of Managed Care on MRI Adoption and Use
- The Effects of Managed Care Organizations on Government Spending and Health Care Quality: Evidence from California’s Medicaid Mandates
- The Effects of PPOs on Health Care Use and Costs
- The Effects of the New York Health Care Reform Act of 1996 on Health Services Accessibility and Efficiency
- The Emerging Market for Pharmacogenomics and Health Care Competition
- The Fishing Partnership Health Plan: A Model for Reducing the Numbers of the Working Uninsured
- The Impact of Assisted Living Growth on the Market for Nursing Home Care
- The Impact of Managed Behavioral Health Market Share, Public Sector Carve-Outs, and Parity Legislation on Service Utilization for Children and Adolescents: Results from NSAF and CTS
- The Impact of Managed Care on the Appropriateness and Outcomes of Carotid Endarterectomy
- The Impact of Medicaid Managed Care on Prenatal Use and Birth Outcomes
- The Impact of Multiple Consumer Driven Health Plans Beyond Early Adoption: Here to Stay or Market Fad?
- The Impact of Nonprofit Conversions on Community Benefit
- The Impact of Pay for Performance on Hospitals that Care for Minorities and the Poor
- The Impact of Performance Reporting on Consumer and Physician Organization Behavior
- The Impact of Pharmaceutical Formularies on Prescription Drug and Health Care Costs and Utilization
- The Impact of Quality Information on Consumer Plan Choices: Does Health Status Matter?
- The Impact of the Prospective Payment System on Nursing Home Care
- The Impacts of Undocumented Immigrants on the U.S. Health Care System
- The Incidence of Financing National Health Spending
- The Influence of Accreditation on Local Health Department Performance in NC
- The Influence of Managed Care on Physician Scope of Practice
- The Kaiser Permanente Medicare Demonstration: Policy Implications of Offering a Dual Option Benefit Package in an HMO
- The Medicaid Undercount: Real or Perceived Bias in Estimates of Coverage in General Population Surveys
- The Painful Prescription: Revisited
- The Provision and Reporting of Community Benefits by Hospitals: Lessons from Maryland
- The Relationship Between Market Forces and the Cost, Treatments and Outcomes of Medicare AMI Patients
- The Rise in Employer Health Care Costs -- Phase 1
- The Rise in Employer Health Costs -- Phase 2
- The Role of Benefit Design in Enrollment, Use and Spending in State Prescription Drug Assistance Programs for Seniors - Lessons for Medicare
- The Safety Net and Employer-Provided Health Insurance
- The Transformation of Corporate Health Care Purchasing
- The Treatment of Dying Medicare Managed Care Patients: The Role of Social and Economic Factors
- Trauma System Structure and Performance
- Trends in Medigap Insurance and the Impact of Recent Market and Regulatory Changes
- Understanding and Assessing Partnership Connections in Public Health Departments
- Understanding Medical Necessity Decision Making
- Understanding the Resource Allocation Decisions of Public Health Officials in the U.S.
- Uninsured in America: Individual and Community Factors
- Uptake and Impact of Health Risk Appraisals
- Use of Tiered Networks by Employer Sponsored Health Plans
- Using Physician Profiling Software to Evaluate the Practice Efficiency of Physician Specialists
- Utilization Review: Cost Savings and Quality of Care
- Variation in Health Care Cost Growth
- Waiting for Outpatient Care and Choice in Financing
- Web Links
- When Doctors Believe They Are Not Providing Good Care: The Sources of Professional Distress in the American Health Care System
The Complexities of Patient Cost-Sharing
February 2011
- Cost-Sharing and Total Health Spending
- Cost-Sharing and Low-Income Populations
- Cost-Sharing and Prescription Drugs
- Future Directions: Value-Based Insurance Design
- Conclusion
- Related HCFO Grants
Slowing the growth of health care spending is critical to improving the fiscal health of the country. A key question is whether the various approaches to patient cost-sharing, such as copayments, deductibles, and higher rates of coinsurance can be an effective means of lowering health care costs and discouraging overutilization without causing adverse health outcomes. For policymakers, employers, and health plans, a “one size fits all” approach to cost-sharing is unlikely to have the intended effects and could, in fact, generate higher costs and negative health effects. Evidence suggests that a finely targeted approach holds the greatest promise for success.
As part of its Synthesis Project, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation recently released a comprehensive report, “Cost-Sharing: Effects on Spending and Outcomes.”1 The goal of the Synthesis Project is to gather research findings on a specific health policy question, weigh the evidence and strength of the findings, and give policymakers reliable, objective information to inform complex policy decisions. This report on cost-sharing is particularly relevant in the current policy environment. With the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Affordable Care Act or ACA), there is a need for evidence-based information on the effects of cost-sharing. Rapidly rising health care expenditures have led some decision-makers to seek greater cost-sharing from consumers as a way to engage them more fully in the health care decision-making process, discourage unnecessary utilization, and reduce costs. However, there is mixed evidence on the ultimate effect of cost-sharing on consumer behavior and a concern that some populations are more negatively impacted by increased cost-sharing.
Although consumers have seen an increase over time in the dollar amount of their total out-of-pocket expenses, total health care costs have increased at a faster rate. As a result, total consumer out-of-pocket spending declined as a percentage of total private health costs from 33 percent in 1990 to 25 percent in 2002.2 Several features of the ACA will eliminate or limit patient cost-sharing for particular services, and new regulations governing insurance plans sold in health insurance exchanges will set limits on patient cost-sharing across four levels of coverage. These changes are designed to give patients who receive their coverage outside of the employer-sponsored market greater clarity and standardization in their benefits, along with a cap on out-of-pocket costs ($5,950 per year for an individual and $11,900 for families) to provide protection against catastrophic expenses.3 The ACA will eliminate copayments or cost-sharing for certain preventative care services that receive an “A” or “B” rating from the United States Preventative Services Task Force (e.g. services that have a high or moderate certainty of showing a moderate or substantial net benefit). The law also defines essential benefits for insurance packages sold in exchanges and in the individual and small-group market, and offers cost-sharing assistance for low-income patients for certain health care services.4 The expectation is that by removing the cost-sharing burden for preventative care, higher costs (such as those associated with preventable hospitalizations) will be avoided.
As policymakers continue to refine cost-sharing requirements associated with ACA provisions, information from the Synthesis Project report can help inform discussions about the effects of placing a greater share of health care costs on the consumer.
Cost-Sharing and Total Health Spending
The foundation for the report’s analysis is the RAND Health Insurance Experiment (HIE). Although the experiment was designed and conducted in the 1970s, it remains the seminal study examining variations in health insurance design. The HIE showed that higher rates of coinsurance led to declines in medical care use. However, the decline was the result in failure to initiate care; once patients sought care, the intensity of services and attendant cost was largely unaffected. The HIE findings also showed that increased cost sharing reduced both necessary and unnecessary services.
The health care landscape has changed since the HIE, but its findings have important implications for total health expenditures in the United States. The distribution of health costs is highly skewed—a large amount of spending is allocated to a small proportion of the population, largely the sickest individuals. While greater cost-sharing may lead this population to limit visits to doctors’ offices, once they seek care the amount and intensity of services they receive reflects physician preferences and norms of care. Cost-sharing does not significantly lower overall expenditures because utilization and expenses for this population are largely in the provider’s control. The HIE showed that reductions in patient-initiated care also predominantly come from the healthiest segment of the population who only account for three percent of the nation’s total health expenditures. A reduction in spending among this group will not significantly lower national health costs.
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Cost-Sharing and Low-Income Populations
The Synthesis report discusses the strong evidence that low-income populations are disproportionately affected by increased cost-sharing, which can have adverse financial and health effects for this group.
Featured in the Synthesis report is HCFO-funded work led by Jeanene Smith, M.D., which examined how benefit reductions and increased cost-sharing impacted the Oregon Medicaid program. Her study found that while the introduction of cost-sharing decreased the utilization of health care services, the mix of services became more expensive and there were no budgetary savings.5 These findings, revealing the unintended consequences of shifting the health care cost burden to vulnerable individuals, are consistent with other work on low-income populations and cost-sharing. Another study looked at health care utilization after the implementation of increased prescription drug cost-sharing for low-income populations in Quebec. The study found that the population experienced a higher rate of emergency department visits after the implementation of greater drug cost-sharing, thus increasing total spending.6
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Cost-Sharing and Prescription Drugs
In an effort to control costs, health plans and pharmacy benefit managers have spent the last several years implementing tiered systems of drug coverage. Commonly under this structured system, the lowest tier (usually generic drugs) will have little or perhaps no copayment, while more expensive brand-name drugs will require higher cost-sharing by the consumer. A number of studies have examined these payment structures and their effect of drug utilization and adherence. The studies have established that there is an association between increased cost-sharing for prescription drugs and a decrease in their use.7
Policymakers often support the use of generic drugs as a way to lower overall health care expenditures, as well as lower drug expenses for individuals. However, the evidence is mixed on whether patients are more likely to switch to generic drugs when faced with higher copayments for brand-name drugs. In a HCFO-funded study led by Richard Frank, Ph.D., patients were more likely to select different brand-name drugs with lower copayments (rather than generics) when confronted with increased numbers of tiers or higher copayments.8 In another study in which payments were increased for brand-name but not generic drugs, patients responded by lowering their use of both classes of drugs, suggesting a lack of understanding of the chemical equivalence of generic drugs.9
Current HCFO research is examining the effects of benefit design and cost-sharing in the Medicare Part D prescription drug program. Jack Hoadley, Ph.D. is examining generic substitution within Part D and if plan-level benefit design and formulary characteristics are associated with the use of generics. His project will provide policymakers with a clearer picture of the factors that influence generic utilization and inform efforts to create cost savings within Part D.10 Under another HCFO grant, Cindy Thomas, Ph.D. is studying the impact of state Medicaid policies to support Part D for dually eligible beneficiaries. She is examining the impact of copayment assistance for this low-income population on outcomes and overall health care utilization.11 Like the Hoadley study, the Thomas research will add to the evidence base on this important topic and help provide a clearer picture of the effects of cost-sharing on health outcomes and costs.
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Future Directions: Value-Based Insurance Design
While the studies to date fail to provide one clear path for the use of cost-sharing as a tool to reign in costs, the evidence does suggest that carefully targeting cost-sharing may be effective. Two trends are currently being tested―increased offering of consumer-directed health plans (CDHPs) and the use of value-based insurance design (VBID).
Through its offering of CDHPs, purchasers are moving toward higher deductibles and copayments in both preferred provider organization and health maintenance organization insurance products. These initiatives are part of an effort to incentivize consumer cost-consciousness and efficient delivery of care.12
A second innovation, which the Synthesis report cites as an understudied area of promise for reducing costs and improving outcomes, is VBID. The core premise of VBID involves removing or eliminating financial barriers to high-value drugs and services. Conversely, cost-sharing can be increased for low-value services. The overall goal is to improve compliance and health, and avoid the potentially costly complications of non-adherence. Ultimately, plans that utilize features of VBID could tailor benefits for patients with certain medical conditions (particularly chronic conditions that involve a high degree of maintenance), or, more broadly, eliminate barriers to high-value services for all participants.
Two HCFO-funded studies will add to the evidence base on VBID. In the first study, Niteesh Choudhry, M.D., Ph.D., has found that while VBID has potential to improve the overall value of health care, there needs to be a greater effort to target copayment reductions effectively. Additionally, VBID faces hurdles due to the fragmented system of care in the United States. Payers make an initial outlay to implement the program but are not always able to recoup savings from its positive effects.13 In the second study, Matthew Maciejewski, Ph.D., is examining “Medication Dedication,” a program of BlueCross Blue Shield of North Carolina that eliminated copayments for generic medications and reduced copayments for certain brand-name drugs for several chronic conditions. His preliminary results have shown that the program improved medication adherence among the study population, as compared with patients whose employer did not offer a similar program; but more evidence is needed on longer-term adherence trends and spending.14
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The Synthesis Project report concludes that there are still many questions unanswered on the effects of patient cost-sharing. In particular, there are gaps in knowledge around the long-term effects of cost-sharing on health, the specific types of services that are reduced when patients face greater cost-sharing, and the types of interactions that occur between cost-sharing and different types of health insurance. While the studies analyzed in the report confirm the broad conclusion first put forth by the HIE that demand for most health care services is price-sensitive, much is still unknown on how best to structure cost-sharing without creating unintended adverse cost and health consequences.
As payers and patients struggle with the rising cost of health care, cost-sharing initiatives will remain in the spotlight as a potential tool to control costs and encourage responsible utilization. Policymakers implementing ACA initiatives will need to balance the evidence on the advantages and drawbacks of patient cost-sharing as they work to develop effective insurance coverage.
Details on studies led by HCFO grantees are available at http://www.hcfo.org. The report on cost-sharing, as well as other reports in the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Synthesis Project can be found at http://www.rwjf.org/pr/synthesis.jsp.
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Related HCFO Grants
Title: Surviving the Perfect Storm: Impacts of Benefit Reductions and Increased Cost-Sharing in a Medicaid Program
Grantee Institution: Office of Oregon Health Policy and Research
Principal Investigator: Jeanene Smith, M.D.
Grant Period: June 1, 2004-August 31, 2006
How have benefit reductions and increased cost sharing impacted the Oregon Health Plan (OHP)? The researchers examined: (1) impacts on economic viability, including whether cost savings accrue to Medicaid or whether additional costs will be incurred as beneficiaries shift from one benefit to another; (2) impacts on access, including whether access and continuity of care will be compromised as a result of cost sharing and benefit reduction strategies; and (3) impacts on coverage, including the degree to which Medicaid beneficiaries leave the program due to these changes. The objective of this study was to inform state decision makers who continue to seek efficient cost-saving strategies and consider competing approaches for maintaining and rebuilding benefits following reductions in Medicaid and reshaping publicly financed health care.
Title: The Impact of Pharmaceutical Formularies on Prescription Drug and Health Care Costs and Utilization
Grantee Institution: Harvard University
Principal Investigator: Richard Frank, Ph.D.
Grant Period: May 1, 2001-April 30, 2004
What are the effects of a health plan instituting a three-tiered co-payment (TTCP) financing mechanism on prescription drug spending, total health care spending, and patients' compliance with treatment protocols and quality of care? The study, conducted by researchers at Harvard University in conjunction with Merck-Medco, involved an analysis of Merck-Medco administrative, medical and pharmaceutical claims, and encounter data. The researchers investigated the effects of the three-tier co-payments on drug use and costs for both drugs and other health care services as well as the effects of the three-tier formulary on patterns of care for patients diagnosed with depression, congestive heart failure, and hypercholesterolemia. This study informs public and private policymakers - particularly those involved in designing proposals for adding a prescription drug benefit to Medicare - on the range of implications a three-tier copay strategy for prescription drug cost containment may have for patients, plans, and the market.
Title: Generic Substitution within a Class of Drugs for Medicare Part D Plans
Grantee Institution: Georgetown University
Principal Investigator: Jack F. Hoadley, Ph.D.
Grant Period: April 1, 2010-March 31, 2011
The researchers will examine the extent of generic drug use in Medicare’s stand alone drug plans for three classes of drugs: cholesterol drugs, antidepressants, and hypertension drugs. They will determine whether plan-level benefit design and formulary design characteristics and the program’s overall design are associated with the use of generics. Specifically, they will examine four research questions: 1) are shifts to generic alternatives within a drug class influenced by differences in benefit and formulary design; 2) does the impact of benefit and formulary design features differ between beneficiaries eligible for the Part D program’s low-income subsidy (LIS) and other, unsubsidized beneficiaries; 3) do effects vary by drug and drug class; and 4) does the coverage gap design feature of the Part D program affect the use of generics? The objective of this project is to provide policymakers with a better understanding of the forces that influence generic utilization and the potential opportunities to create health care cost savings within the Part D program.
Title: Impact of State Policies Supporting Medicare Part D for the Dually Eligible
Grantee Institution: Brandeis University
Principal Investigator: Cindy Parks Thomas, Ph.D.
Grant Period: May 1, 2010-April 20, 2012
The researchers will assess two state Medicaid policies - co-payment assistance to reduce cost sharing and beneficiary centered assignment. They will examine the impact of these policies for the dually eligible population on health outcomes (health care utilization and sentinel events), beneficiary switching among plans, continuity of drug treatment, and Medicare program costs. The researchers will compare beneficiaries in six states that provide full co-payment assistance to those states without such assistance. They will also compare beneficiaries in Maine, the only state with CMS-approved beneficiary centered assignment for dually eligible beneficiaries, to similar beneficiaries in other states. The objective of this project is to inform the Medicare program and state policymakers on the impact of the Part D benefit on dually eligible beneficiaries.
Title: Factors Influencing the Success of Value-Based Insurance Design Programs
Grantee Institution: Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Principal Investigator: Niteesh K. Choudhry, M.D., Ph.D.
Grant Period: May 1, 2010-October 31, 2011
The researchers will conduct a series of natural experiments examining value-based insurance design plans (VBID) implemented by CVS Caremark, a large pharmacy benefit manager, on behalf of numerous clients. They will evaluate the impact of different VBID characteristics on patterns of adherence, discontinuation and use of statins by (1) developing a system to classify differences in VBID plan characteristics that may influence the ability of these plans to stimulate the use of evidence-based medications; (2) surveying plan administrators and plan sponsors to identify additional plan features that might confound the relationship between VBID plan characteristics and medication use; and (3) using pharmacy claims to determine which VBID design features (and combinations thereof) most effectively stimulate appropriate medication use. The objective of this project is to determine the factors that influence the success of value-based insurance design plans (VBID) and to develop “best practices” for future implementation.
Title: The Patient and System Benefits of Value-Based Insurance Design
Grantee Institution: Duke University
Principal Investigator: Matthew L. Maciejewski, Ph.D.
Grant Period: April 1, 2010-March 31, 2011
The researchers will examine “Medication Dedication,” a BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina (BCBSNC) program that eliminated copayments for generic medications and reduced copayments for brand-name medications to treat hypertension, congestive heart failure, hyperlipidemia and diabetes. The researchers will determine whether VBID improved medication utilization behavior among BCBSNC enrollees with hypertension during the first two years of the program and address the following research questions: (1) did the initiation of Medication Dedication impact medication initiation, switching and adherence among program participants with hypertension; and 2) did Medication Dedication impact inpatient, outpatient or emergency room health services utilization and expenditures among program participants with hypertension. The objective of this project is to explore the business case for value-based insurance design (VBID) and to inform benefit design changes and cost-containment strategies being considered by insurers and Medicare.
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1. Swartz, K. “Cost-Sharing: Effects on Spending and Outcomes,” Synthesis Project, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, December 2010. Also see http://www.rwjf.org/pr/product.jsp?id=71583
2. Goff, V. “Consumer Cost Sharing in Private Health Insurance,” Issue Brief, No. 798, National Health Policy Forum, May 14, 2004.
3. Rabin, R.C. “In Health Law, a Clearer View of Coverage,” The New York Times, May 17, 2010.
4. Rosenbaum, S. “Value-Based Health Care Purchasing: Essential Health Benefits and State Health Insurance Exchanges,” HealthReformGPS, January 25, 2011. Also see http://www.healthreformgps.org
5. Wallace, N.T. et al. “How Effective are Copayments in Reducing Expenditures for Low-Income Adult Medicaid Beneficiaries? Experience from the Oregon Health Plan,” Health Services Research, Vol. 43, No. 2, 2008, pp. 515-530. Also see http://www.hcfo.org/files/hcfo/HCFOfindings0708.pdf
6. Tambryn, R. et al. “Adverse Events Associated with Prescription Drug Cost-Sharing Among Poor and Elderly Persons,” JAMA, Vol. 285, No. 4, 2001, pp. 421-429.
7. Goldman, D.P. et al. “Prescription Drug Cost Sharing: Associations with Medicarion and Medical Utilization and Spending and Health,” JAMA, Vol. 298, No. 1, 2007, pp. 61-69.
8. Huskamp, H.A. et al. “The Effect of Incentive-Based Formularies on Prescription Drug Utilization and Spending,” New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 349, No. 23, 2003, pp. 2224-2232.
9. Gibson,T.B. et al. “A copayment Increase for Prescription Drugs: the Long-Term and Short-Term effects on Use and Expenditures,” Inquiry, Vol. 42, No. 3, 2005, pp. 293-310.
10. http://www.hcfo.org/grants/generic-substitution-within-class-drugs-medicare-part-d-plans
11. http://www.hcfo.org/grants/impact-state-policies-supporting-medicare-part-d-dually-eligible
12. Robinson, J.C. “Renewed Emphasis on Consumer Cost Sharing in Health Insurance Benefit Design,” Health Affairs, Web, w139-w154, March 20, 2002.
13. Choudhry, M.K., et al. “Assessing the Evidence for Value-Based Insurance Design,” Health Affairs, Vol. 29, No. 11, November 2010, pp. 1988-1994.
14. Maciejewski, M.L. et al. “Copayment Reductions Generate Greater Medication Adherence in Targeted Patients,” Health Affairs, Vol. 29, No. 11, November 2010, pp. 2002-2008.
