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An oversight oversight

Leaving health care market to its own devices not working in U.S.

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Good questions, all. Brill answers them by taking readers on a guided tour of the Alice-in-Wonderland world of medical billing as experienced by ordinary patients for whom getting the bill became an ordeal equal to and sometimes surpassing the illness itself.

Such as “Steve H.”, who never asked the cost of outpatient treatment for his ailing back because his union-sponsored health insurance plan had $45,000 remaining on its annual $60,000 spending limit. “He figured, how much could a day at Mercy [hospital] cost? ... Five thousand? Maybe 10?”

The bill came to $89,000, including $45,000 for an electronic stimulator Brill learns that Mercy Hospital bought from the manufacturer for $19,000, which spent roughly 25% of that amount making and shipping it. (An arbitrator persuaded the hospital to settle for $10,000 of the $44,000 it said Steve H. owed.)

Moreover, as medical markups go, Steve H. got off relatively easy. The “chargemaster” computerized system hospitals use to prepare bills routinely assesses patients 10 times and more what commonly used items like gauze pads and surgical gowns actually cost. If baseball teams treated their captive audiences like that, they’d be selling $40 beers.

At times, Brill’s mordant deconstruction of hospital bills can be grimly funny -- even if Alice D., left facing a $900,000 bill for her dead husband’s futile cancer treatment, can be pardoned for not laughing. In the end, “her losses from the fixed poker game that she was forced to play in the worst of times with the worst of cards,” persuaded Alice she could never afford to remarry.

Ultimately, many of these humungous bills are never collected; the industry average is around 35%, although prestigious hospitals like M.D. Anderson collect 50% of what they charge. Most are “non-profits” only in the sense of having no stockholders; instead, administrators are paid princely multi-million salaries. They occupy themselves building empires.

In the end, Brill concludes that Americans pay an enormous price for refusing to admit that “because the health care market deals in a life-or-death product, it cannot be left to its own devices.”

In pointing this out, he and Time have done a great public service.
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real one wrote on March 19, 2013 4:52 p.m. ...
Spot on. Country with great health care potential but out of reach for most.

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