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Press Release  HPC REPORT FINDS MASSACHUSETTS RESIDENTS AND BUSINESSES FACE UNSUSTAINABLE GROWTH IN HEALTH CARE COSTS, CALLS FOR POLICY ACTION

The HPC’s 10th annual Health Care Cost Trends Report urges updates to advance cost containment, affordability, and health equity
For immediate release:
9/13/2023
  • Massachusetts Health Policy Commission

Media Contact   for HPC REPORT FINDS MASSACHUSETTS RESIDENTS AND BUSINESSES FACE UNSUSTAINABLE GROWTH IN HEALTH CARE COSTS, CALLS FOR POLICY ACTION

Mickey O’Neill, Communications Director

BOSTONToday, the Massachusetts Health Policy Commission (HPC) voted to issue the 2023 Health Care Cost Trends Report and comprehensive policy recommendations. The HPC reports that the average expense of employer-based private health insurance in 2021 climbed to $22,163, outpacing growth in wages and salaries. Including copayments, deductibles, and out-of-pocket spending, health care costs for Massachusetts families neared $25,000 annually. The HPC found that 72% of small business health insurance plans featured deductibles exceeding $2,800 for families (or $1,400 for individuals) in 2021, with annual family premiums simultaneously surging from $16,000 to $23,000 since 2012. The report highlights the unequal burden of these trends, finding persistent disparities across income and racial/ethnic groups with nearly 1 in 5 lower-income residents having high out-of-pocket spending, for example, and significantly higher infant mortality rates and rates of premature deaths from treatable causes among Black and Hispanic residents compared to other residents. To address these complex and interrelated challenges, the HPC calls for urgent action to update the state’s policy framework to more effectively contain cost growth, alleviate the financial burden of health care costs on Massachusetts families, and promote equity in access to care and outcomes for all residents. The presentation materials from the Board meeting and a recording of the meeting are available on the HPC’s website.

“The 2023 Health Care Cost Trends report makes clear how we must do more in Massachusetts to provide more affordable and equitable access. Policymakers do not have to choose between high quality care and affordability,” said Deb Devaux, HPC Board Chair. “We have tremendous opportunities for transformative action to support patients and employers.”

Among the report’s findings were that, on average from 2019 to 2021, total health care spending increased 3.2% per year, higher than the 3.1% health care cost growth benchmark. Commercial spending grew by 5.8% per year, far outpacing the national average in a reversal of prior years of relatively slower growth. Commercial expenditures for prescription drugs and hospital outpatient care grew the fastest; the average price per prescription for branded drugs exceeded $1,000 in 2021, up from $684 in 2017 while the average commercial price for hospital outpatient services grew by 8.4% from 2019 to 2021. The average price for many common hospital stays also increased, with most growing by 10% or more over the same period. The HPC estimates that by eliminating excessive spending due to unreasonably high prices, overuse of high-cost sites of care, and overprovision of care, the Commonwealth could see systemwide savings of nearly $3.5 billion annually.

With the report, the HPC announces nine policy recommendations for improving oversight and accountability and promoting affordability and equity in the health care system.

“The residents of the Commonwealth deserve a policy framework equal to the novel challenges facing our health care system today,” said David Seltz, HPC Executive Director. “The recommendations in this report provide a roadmap for policymakers to equip the state with the tools it needs to constrain health care cost growth equitably and sustainably in a manner that meaningfully addresses existing disparities in access and outcomes.”

2023 HEALTH CARE COST TRENDS REPORT – POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS

The HPC recommends reforms to reduce health care cost growth, promote affordability, and advance equity, with an emphasis on modernizing the state’s nation-leading benchmark framework.

  1. Modernize the Commonwealth’s benchmark framework to prioritize health care affordability and equity for all. As recommended in past years, the Commonwealth should strengthen the accountability mechanisms of the benchmark such as by updating the metrics and referral standards used in the performance improvement plan (PIP) process and enhancing transparency and PIP enforcement tools. The state should also modernize its health care policy framework to promote affordability and equity including through the establishment of affordability and equity benchmarks.
  2. Constrain excessive provider prices. As found in previous cost trends reports, prices continue to be the primary driver of health care spending growth in Massachusetts. To address the substantial impact of high and variable provider prices, the HPC recommends the Legislature enact limitations on excessively high commercial provider prices, require site-neutral payments for routine ambulatory services, and adopt a default out-of-network payment rate for "surprise billing" situations.
  3. Enhance oversight of pharmaceutical spending. The HPC continues to recommend that policymakers take steps to address the rapid increase in retail drug spending in Massachusetts with policy action to enhance oversight and transparency. Specific policy actions include adding pharmaceutical manufacturers and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) under the HPC's oversight, enabling the Center for Health Information and Analysis (CHIA) to collect comprehensive drug pricing data, requiring licensure of PBMs, expanding the HPC's drug pricing review authority, and establishing caps on monthly out-of-pocket costs for high-value prescription drugs.
  4. Make health plans accountable for affordability. The Division of Insurance (DOI) should closely monitor premium growth factors and utilize affordability targets for evaluating health plan rate filings. Policymakers should promote enrollment through the Massachusetts Connector and the expansion of alternative payment methods (APMs). Lower-income employees should be supported by reducing premium contributions through tax credits or wage-adjusted contributions.
  5. Advance health equity for all. To address enduring health inequities in Massachusetts, the state must invest in affordable housing, improved food and transportation systems, and solutions to mitigate the impact of climate change. Payer-provider contracts should promote health equity via performance data stratification and link payments to meeting equity targets. Payers should commit to the adoption of the data standards recommended by the Health Equity Data Standards Technical Advisory Group, and efforts should be made to ensure that the health care workforce reflects the diversity of the state’s population.
  6. Reduce administrative complexity. The Legislature should require standardization in payer claims administration and processing, build upon the momentum from recent federal initiatives to require automation of prior authorization processes, and mandate the adoption of a standardized measure set to reduce reporting burdens and ensure consistency.
  7. Strengthen tools to monitor the provider market and align the supply and distribution of services with community need. The HPC recommends enhanced regulatory measures including focused, data-driven assessments of service supply and distribution based on identified needs and updates to the state's existing regulatory tools such as the Essential Services Closures process, the Determination of Need (DoN) program, and the HPC's material change notice (MCN) oversight authority.
  8. Support and invest in the Commonwealth’s health care workforce. The state and health care organizations should build on recent state investments to stabilize and strengthen the health care workforce. The Commonwealth should offer initial financial assistance to ease the costs of education and training, minimize entry barriers, explore policy adjustments for improved wages in underserved areas, and adopt the Nurse Licensure Compact to simplify hiring from other states. Health care delivery organizations should invest in their workforces, improve working conditions, provide opportunities for advancement, improve compensation for non-clinical staff (e.g., community health workers, community navigators, and peer recovery coaches) and take collaborative steps to enhance workforce diversity.
  9. Strengthen primary and behavioral health care. Payers and providers should increase investment in primary care and behavioral health while adhering to cost growth benchmarks. Addressing the need for behavioral health services involves measures such as enhancing access to appropriate care, expanding inpatient beds, investing in community-based alternatives, aligning the behavioral health workforce to current needs, employing telehealth, and improving access to treatment for opioid use disorder particularly in places where existing inequities present barriers.

The full text of all nine policy recommendations can be found in the report.

2023 HEALTH CARE COST TRENDS REPORT – KEY FINDINGS

Prices continue to be the primary driver of health care spending growth in Massachusetts.

In the report, the HPC identifies price, rather than utilization, as the primary driver of the increase in spending. Commercial prices grew substantially from 2018 to 2021, with an 8.8% increase for office-based services, a 12.1% rise for hospital outpatient services, and a 10.2% uptick for inpatient care. Total payment per hospital discharge for commercially insured patients grew by 23% between 2017 and 2021, primarily driven by a 34% price increase for non-labor-and-delivery discharges.

HPC’s analyses of excess spending found that, private insurers paid providers more than twice what Medicare would have paid for nearly 40% of all lab tests and imaging procedures in 2021. Taken together, commercial spending on lab tests, imaging procedures, inpatient hospital stays, clinician-administered drugs, endoscopies, prescription drugs, and certain specialty services accounted for 45% of commercial spending. Among this spending, 27% was in excess of double what Medicare would have paid (or 120% of international drug prices), equivalent to approximately $3,000 annually for a family with private insurance.

Other findings include:

  • Excessive spending from unnecessary use of care. Unnecessary utilization of care, such as procedures that could be performed in more cost-effective ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs), care that provides no clinical benefit to patients, and low-risk births in academic medical centers (AMCs) that are reimbursed at higher rates than those in community hospitals, contribute to excessive spending.
  • Administrative spending. Administrative spending of both hospitals and insurers has increased substantially, with hospital administrative costs nearly doubling from 2011 to 2021, and insurers experiencing growth in administrative spending for both small and large group coverage.
  • Price trends. Escalating price trends are evident from 2018 to 2021, with commercial prices increasing for various services including: office services, hospital outpatient care, and inpatient services.  Payments for inpatient hospital care grew by 23%, driven primarily by non-labor-and-delivery discharges.
  • Provider organization performance variation. Variation in provider organization performance continues, with medical spending differing widely between major provider groups, and the rate of avoidable visits and imaging utilization varying significantly.
  • Hospital utilization. Massachusetts maintains the highest hospital utilization rate for Medicare beneficiaries among all states, and higher statewide rates of inpatient stays, outpatient visits, and emergency department visits.  The Commonwealth also ranks among the highest in the nation in preventable hospitalizations and readmission rates.
  • Primary care. Between 2017 and 2021, primary care spending grew more slowly than other medical spending, leading to a decrease in primary care's share of total commercial spending; significant disparities in access to primary care between low and high-income communities persist.
  • Behavioral health. Behavioral health trends show a substantial increase in psychotherapy visits and mental health prescriptions among young adults, alongside a rise in the proportion of patients admitted to acute care hospitals for mental health conditions.  While opioid-related hospitalizations declined overall, Black non-Hispanic residents experienced persistent increases until 2020.

The full report and policy recommendations, five chartpacks, and an interactive Cost Trends Report dashboard are available on the HPC’s website.

The findings and recommendations of the report will be discussed during the HPC Cost Trends Hearing on November 8, 2023, at Suffolk University Law School in Boston. Register to attend the HPC Cost Trends Hearing in person at tinyurl.com/CTH23reg or watch via livestream.

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Media Contact   for HPC REPORT FINDS MASSACHUSETTS RESIDENTS AND BUSINESSES FACE UNSUSTAINABLE GROWTH IN HEALTH CARE COSTS, CALLS FOR POLICY ACTION

  • Massachusetts Health Policy Commission 

    The Massachusetts Health Policy Commission (HPC) is an independent state agency charged with monitoring health care spending growth in Massachusetts and providing data-driven policy recommendations regarding health care delivery and payment system reform. The HPC’s mission is to advance a more transparent, accountable, and equitable health care system through its independent policy leadership and innovative investment programs. The HPC’s goal is better health and better care – at a lower cost – for all residents across the Commonwealth.
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