(Press-News.org) A "secret shopper" study conducted by researchers with University of Iowa Health Care and Iowa City VA Medical Center reveals the difficulty consumers face when attempting to obtain prices for a common surgical procedure.
The study found that 40 percent of top-ranked and 36 percent of non-top-ranked hospitals were unable to provide a price estimate for a total hip replacement procedure. Moreover, among the hospitals that could provide an estimate, the cost quoted for the procedure ranged from $11,100 to $125,798 – a more than ten-fold difference.
While data on hospital quality is now widely available from public and private sector sources, the UI study suggests that pricing data is much harder to obtain. The study suggests that calls for greater transparency in pricing have not had a big effect.
"There have been many initiatives to increase pricing transparency, including state and federal laws, and still many hospitals are unable to provide price information for a common procedure," says Jaime Rosenthal, lead author on the study, which was published online Feb. 7 in JAMA Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication. "Also, the variation in pricing was striking, as we tried to give each hospital identical information in terms of what the procedure would require."
Rosenthal and her colleagues Xin Lu and Peter Cram, M.D., randomly selected two hospitals from each state and the District of Columbia that performed total hip replacements as well as the 20 top-ranked orthopedic hospitals according to US News and World Report. Calling on behalf of a hypothetical patient, Rosenthal requested the lowest "complete" price (hospital plus physician fees) for an elective total hip replacement. The fictitious patient, a 62-year old grandmother, did not have health insurance but was able to pay for the procedure out-of-pocket. When a hospital could provide the hospital fee only, the researchers contacted a hospital-affiliated orthopedic surgery practice to obtain a physician fee. Each hospital was contacted up to five times in an attempt to get pricing information.
The study found that nine top-ranked hospitals (45 percent) and 10 non-top-ranked hospitals (10 percent) were able to provide a complete bundled price. Complete price estimates were obtained from an additional three top-ranked hospitals (15 percent) and 54 non-top-ranked hospitals (53 percent) by contacting the hospitals and physicians separately. At top-ranked hospitals the complete price ranged from $12,500 to $105,000 and at non-top-ranked hospitals prices ranged from $11,100 to $125,798.
The study did not find any specific hospital characteristics that were associated with a lower or higher price estimate, but Cram notes that only a small sampling of hospitals was included in the study.
"A big finding was the absolutely huge variation in price estimates," says Cram, UI associate professor of internal medicine and director of the Division of General Internal Medicine. "We believe that our results highlight the reality that hospitals have a very hard time knowing their own prices."
"The range in prices suggests that a savvy customer may find that he or she can comparison shop and find significant savings," adds Rosenthal. "Our study suggests that it is important for consumers to ask for information about the cost of medical care and procedures and to be persistent."
For policy makers and hospitals, Rosenthal says, the study suggests there is a long way to go on to improving pricing transparency efforts.
###Rosenthal, a graduate of West High in Iowa City, is currently a senior at Washington University in St. Louis. The findings are a result of a summer research project Rosenthal conducted with Cram at the UI Carver College of Medicine.
This work is funded in part by grants from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and from the National Institute on Aging at the National Institutes of Health.
Price for hip replacement highly variable, hard to obtain
Many hospitals were unable to provide price estimate for hip replacement and price estimates varied by a factor of ten.
2013-02-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Can computers save health care? IU research shows lower costs, better outcomes
2013-02-11
New research from Indiana University has found that machine learning - the same computer science discipline that helped create voice recognition systems, self-driving cars, and credit card fraud detection systems - can drastically improve both the cost and quality of health care in the United States.
Using an artificial intelligence framework combining Markov Decision Processes and Dynamic Decision Networks, IU School of Informatics and Computing researchers Casey Bennett and Kris Hauser show how simulation modeling that understands and predicts the outcomes of treatment ...
Obesity, excess weight gain during pregnancy linked to heavier babies in African-American women
2013-02-11
(Boston) – Epidemiologists at Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH) have found that pre-pregnancy obesity and excess weight gain during pregnancy in African-American women are associated with an increased risk of giving birth to an abnormally large baby. Macrosomia, which is defined as a newborn weighing more than 4,000 grams at birth (approximately 8.8 pounds), can cause delivery complications such as hemorrhage, infection, the need for a caesarean section, preeclampsia and perinatal mortality. The study, which appears online in the journal Obesity, was conducted ...
Anxiety about relationships may lower immunity, increase vulnerability to illness
2013-02-11
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Concerns and anxieties about one's close relationships appear to function as a chronic stressor that can compromise immunity, according to new research.
In the study, researchers asked married couples to complete questionnaires about their relationships and collected saliva and blood samples to test participants' levels of a key stress-related hormone and numbers of certain immune cells.
The research focused on attachment anxiety. Those who are on the high end of the attachment anxiety spectrum are excessively concerned about being rejected, have a ...
Noisy classroom simulation aids comprehension in hearing-impaired children
2013-02-11
Children with hearing loss struggle to hear in noisy school classrooms, even with the help of hearing aids and other devices to amplify their teacher's voice. Training the brain to filter out background noise and thus understand spoken words could help the academic performance and quality of life for children who struggle to hear, but there's been little evidence that such noise training works in youngsters.
A new report showed about a 50 percent increase in speech comprehension in background noise when children with hearing impairments followed a three-week auditory ...
Large, ancient landslides delivered preferred upstream habitats for coho salmon
2013-02-11
EUGENE, Ore. (Feb. 11, 2013) -- A study of the Umpqua River basin in the Oregon Coast Range helps explain natural processes behind the width of valleys and provides potentially useful details for river restoration efforts designed to improve habitats for coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch).
Coho salmon thrive in broad, flat valleys that contain multiple auxiliary channels to the main river. These valleys formed after large landslides altered the landscape, said study co-author Joshua J. Roering, professor of geological sciences at the University of Oregon. The network ...
Visualizing biological networks in 4-D
2013-02-11
PASADENA, Calif.—Every great structure, from the Empire State Building to the Golden Gate Bridge, depends on specific mechanical properties to remain strong and reliable. Rigidity—a material's stiffness—is of particular importance for maintaining the robust functionality of everything from colossal edifices to the tiniest of nanoscale structures. In biological nanostructures, like DNA networks, it has been difficult to measure this stiffness, which is essential to their properties and functions. But scientists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have recently ...
Old drug may point the way to new treatments for diabetes and obesity
2013-02-11
ANN ARBOR — Researchers at the University of Michigan's Life Sciences Institute have found that amlexanox, an off-patent drug currently prescribed for the treatment of asthma and other uses, also reverses obesity, diabetes and fatty liver in mice.
The findings from the lab of Alan Saltiel, the Mary Sue Coleman director of the Life Sciences Institute, are scheduled to be published online Feb. 10 in the journal Nature Medicine.
"One of the reasons that diets are so ineffective in producing weight loss for some people is that their bodies adjust to the reduced calories ...
New genes for short-sightedness identified
2013-02-11
An international team of scientists led by King's College London has discovered 24 new genes that cause refractive errors and myopia (short-sightedness).
Myopia is a major cause of blindness and visual impairment worldwide, and currently there is no cure. These findings, published today in the journal Nature Genetics, reveal genetic causes of the trait, which could lead to finding better treatments or ways of preventing the condition in the future.
Thirty per cent of Western populations and up to 80 per cent of Asian people suffer from myopia. During visual development ...
NIH scientists discover promising target to block Staphylococcus infection
2013-02-11
National Institutes of Health (NIH) scientists have identified a promising lead for developing a new type of drug to treat infection caused by Staphylococcus aureus, a bacterium that frequently resists traditional antibiotics. The researchers discovered a system used by S. aureus to transport toxins that are thought to contribute to severe staph infections. These toxins—called phenol-soluble modulins (PSMs)—have gained much attention in recent years, but their multitude and diversity have hindered efforts to target them for drug development.
Expanding on work that first ...
Birds evolved ultraviolet vision several times
2013-02-11
Ultraviolet vision evolved at least eight times in birds from a common violet sensitive ancestor finds a study published in BioMed Central's open access journal BMC Evolutionary Biology. All of these are due to single nucleotide changes in the DNA.
Modern daytime birds either have violet sensitive or ultraviolet sensitive vision. Being ultraviolet sensitive alters visual cues used to select a mate, avoiding predators, and in finding food. Researchers from Uppsala University and the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences sequenced the genes responsible for producing ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Imaging-based STAMP technique democratizes single-cell RNA research
Hyperspectral sensor pushes weed science a wave further
War, trade and agriculture spread rice disease across Africa
Study identifies a potential treatment for obesity-linked breathing disorder
From single cells to complex creatures: New study points to origins of animal multicellularity
Language disparities in continuous glucose monitoring for type 2 diabetes
New hormonal pathway links oxytocin to insulin secretion in the pancreas
Optimal management of erosive esophagitis: An evidence-based and pragmatic approach
For patients with multiple cancers, a colorectal cancer diagnosis could be lifesaving — or life-threatening
Digital inhalers may detect early warning signs of COPD flare-ups
Living near harmful algal blooms reduces life expectancy with ALS
Chemical analysis of polyphenolic content and antioxidant screening of 17 African propolis samples using RP-HPLC and spectroscopy
Mount Sinai and Cancer Research Institute team up to improve patient outcomes in immunotherapy
Suicide risk elevated among young adults with disabilities
Safeguarding Mendelian randomization: editorial urges rethink in methodological rigor
Using AI to find persuasive public health messages and automate real-time campaigns
Gene therapy for glaucoma
Teaching robots to build without blueprints
Negative perception of scientists working on AI
How disrupted daily rhythms can affect adolescent brain development
New use for old drug: study finds potential of heart drug for treating growth disorders
Head-to-head study shows bariatric surgery superior to GLP-1 drugs for weight loss
Psychiatric disorders less likely after weight-loss surgery than treatment with GLP-1s
The higher the body mass index, the higher the risk for complications after bariatric surgery
Black patients have higher rate of minor complications after metabolic and bariatric surgery than white patients
A revolution for R&D with the missing link of machine learning — project envisions human-AI expert teams to solve grand challenges
4 ERC Advanced Grants: 10 million Euro for ISTA
ERC awards €2.5 million to TIGEM scientist for project on programmable genetic circuits
Tree rings reveal increasing rainfall seasonality in the Amazon
Scientists find unexpected deep roots in plants
[Press-News.org] Price for hip replacement highly variable, hard to obtainMany hospitals were unable to provide price estimate for hip replacement and price estimates varied by a factor of ten.