Insight: Ballooning bills - More U.S.
hospitals pushing patients to pay before care
Send a link to a friend
[April 13, 2017]
By Jilian Mincer
(Reuters) - Last year, the Henry County
Health Center in Iowa started providing patients with a cost estimate
along with pre-surgery medical advice.
The 25-bed rural hospital in the southwest corner of the state
implemented the protocol because of mounting unpaid bills from insured
patients, a group that had previously not raised red flags.
Henry County is one of hundreds of U.S. hospitals trying to cope with an
unexpected consequence of the Affordable Care Act of 2010, known as
Obamacare: millions more Americans have health insurance, but it
requires them to spend thousands of dollars before their insurer kicks
in a dime.
Since U.S. hospitals do not want to end up footing the bill, they are
now experimenting with pre-payment strategies for patients, with a
growing number requiring payment before scheduled care and offering no
interest loans, according to interviews with more than two dozen
hospitals, doctors, patients, lenders and healthcare experts.
“Most patients are appreciative that we’re telling them up front,” said
David Muhs, chief financial officer for the Henry County hospital, which
provides a discount for early payment. The discussion leads some
patients to skip care, others to delay it or use a no interest loans
available through the hospital, he said.
The ACA extended insurance to 20 million Americans, which initially
helped hospitals begin to shrink debt from uninsured patients who could
not pay their medical bills. But more and more, people in Obamacare
plans or in employer-based health plans are choosing insurance that
features low monthly payments. The trade-off is high out of pocket costs
when they need care. (For a graphic, click
http://tmsnrt.rs/2oCzePS)
If President Donald Trump dismantles Obamacare as promised, these plans
won't disappear. Republicans also believe high-deductible plans curb
spending, and Americans faced with medical costs that rise faster than
inflation and wages will look for premiums they can afford.
The trend is expected to accelerate this year because unpaid bills are
creating massive bad debt for even the most prestigious medical centers.
U.S. hospitals had nearly $36 billion in uncompensated care costs in
2015, according to the industry’s largest trade group, a figure that is
largely made up of unpaid patient bills.
The largest publicly-traded hospital chain, HCA Holdings Inc, reported
in the fourth quarter of 2016 that its ratio of bad debt to gross
revenues of more than $11 billion was 7.5 percent.
One of the first to test this new payment strategy was Novant Health,
headquartered in North Carolina with 14 medical centers and hundreds of
outpatient and physician facilities. It saw patient debt increase when
more local employers started adopting high deductible plans, including
one that made its executives pay $10,000 in out-of-pocket expenses.
“To remain financially stable, we had to do something,” said April York,
senior director of patient finance at Novant, whose patient default rate
dropped to 12 percent from 32 percent after it started offering no
interest loans through ClearBalance.
“Patients needed longer to pay. They needed a variety of options,” she
said.
IMPACT ON PATIENTS
These prepayment strategies are being rolled out by hospitals across the
country because the financial equation has changed so much for patients
– even the insured ones.
[to top of second column] |
An emergency sign points to the entrance to Scripps Memorial
Hospital in La Jolla, California, U.S. March 23, 2017. REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File Photo
Almost half of Americans – 45 percent - polled by the Kaiser Family
Foundation said they would have difficulty paying an unexpected $500
medical bill. The average deductible this year for the least expensive
of the widely used Obamacare health plans is $6,000 for an individual -
an 18 percent spike since 2014 - and more than double that for a family,
according to government data.
Jessica Curtis, a senior advisor at Community Catalyst, a consumer
advocacy group in Boston, said the impact on patients stretches beyond
personal finance.
“They delay procedures, they don’t follow advice on prescription drugs,
and when they see care, they usually are for more expensive procedures
because they’ve waited,” she said
Brian Sanderson, managing principal of Crowe Horwath's healthcare
services group, said communicating with patients and providing longer
repayment options is a good strategy since hospital margins have shrunk,
thanks to growing unpaid medical bills from consumers.
“A well informed patient is more likely to meet their obligations,” he
said. “It’s just good patient relations and it helps to minimize bad
debt.”
Hospitals are doing what they can to retain patients while helping them
pay medical bills that could run thousands of dollars. Many are
expanding charity eligibility, and hiring companies like ClearBalance,
AccessOne and Commerce Bank to provide loans to patients no matter what
their credit. Most carry no interest rate for the patient, and could be
extended far longer than the few months that hospitals once required
before sending a bill to collections.
“People are more likely to pay a bank than a hospital,” said Mark
Huebner, director of Health Services Financing at Commerce Bank, which
offers its line of credit at more than 200 hospitals.
“People are aware that banks will come after them. Banks do collect on
debt, and hospitals generally have been more relaxed,” he said.
Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in North Carolina had seen its bad
debt creep up in recent years as more patients saw out of pocket
expenses soar, with some deductibles reaching $15,000.
“We’ve seen that many patients are unaware of the increases in their
deductibles,” said CFO Chad Eckes. Wake Forest now asks for payment
before non-emergency services are provided but also offers zero
interest, longer repayment options.
“It’s a challenging position,” he said. “It’s a discussion no one wants
to be in, and none of us enjoy.”
(Editing by Caroline Humer and Edward Tobin)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |