High deductibles and the fallacy of caring about health care costs

Let’s say you have a serious illness as described below. Supposedly a high deductible will encourage shopping around for the least expensive health care, why?

If your deductible is $2,000 you are going to pay the first $2,000 in charges whether they are one $2,000 MRI or two $1,000 MRIs. You stretch your costs out over the year or you don’t, but in any case, you are going to pay $2,000. If you have a serious illness with high and prolonged expenses, what does a high deductible do other than shift costs to the patient?

Now, if you have minor, more routine illnesses and it’s unlikely you will reach a total of $2,000 in charges, it is in your best interest to use a generic drug, or perhaps skip an office visit or even question a test, but once you are on the road to real health care costs and a serious illness, your primary concerns are elsewhere.

However, this pattern of illness is not what is driving high health care costs. The fact is the high-deductible is not a tool to encourage  prudent consumers, but a direct cost-shifting method to save money for insurers (and help your premiums I must add). It is the same as the $100 that was common years ago.   For example, when adjusted for health care inflation the 1961 $100 deductible would be $1900.81 in 2014. 

I recently reported on the growing number of Charlotte-area employers who are switching their work force to insurance with high out-of-pocket risks. Harriet Gatter, a Charlotte cancer survivor whose high-deductible plan requires her to pay for her annual MRIs, talked about how tough it is to compare costs when no one wants to talk about what they charge.

via New campaign: Quit hiding health care costs from consumers | The Charlotte Observer The Charlotte Observer.

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