Do high-deductible health plans affect price paid for childbirth?

Betsy Q Cliff
Author Information
  1. Betsy Q Cliff: Division of Health Policy & Administration, University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA. ORCID

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To test whether out-of-pocket costs and negotiated hospital prices for childbirth change after enrollment in high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) and whether price effects differ in markets with more hospitals.
DATA SOURCES: Administrative medical claims data from 2010 to 2014 from three large commercial insurers with plans in all U.S. states provided by the Health Care Cost Institute (HCCI).
STUDY DESIGN: I identify employer groups that switched from non-HDHPs in 1 year to HDHPs in a subsequent year. I estimate enrollees' change in out-of-pocket costs and negotiated hospital prices for childbirth after HDHP switch, relative to a comparison group of employers that do not switch plans. I use a triple-difference design to estimate price changes for enrollees in markets with more hospital choices. Finally, I re-estimate models with hospital-fixed effects.
DATA COLLECTION: From the HCCI sample, childbearing women enrolled in an employer-sponsored plan with at least 10 people.
PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Switching to an HDHP increases out-of-pocket cost $227 (p < 0.001; comparison group base $790) and has no meaningful effect on hospital-negotiated prices (-$26, p = 0.756; comparison group base $5821). HDHP switch is associated with a marginally statistically significant price increase in markets with three or fewer hospitals ($343, p = 0.096; comparison group base $5806) and, relative to those markets, with a price decrease in markets with more than three hospitals (-$512; p = 0.028). Predicted prices decrease from $5702 to $5551 after HDHP switch in markets with more than three hospitals due primarily to lower prices conditional on using the same hospital.
CONCLUSIONS: Prices for childbirth in markets with more hospitals decrease after HDHP switch due to lower hospital prices for HDHPs relative to prices at those same hospitals for non-HDHPs. These results reinforce previous findings that HDHPs do not promote price shopping but suggest negotiated prices may be lower for HDHP enrollees.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. KL2 TR002002/NCATS NIH HHS
  2. R36 HS025614/AHRQ HHS

MeSH Term

Deductibles and Coinsurance
Delivery, Obstetric
Female
Health Benefit Plans, Employee
Health Expenditures
Health Services Research
Humans
Pregnancy
United States

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0pricespricemarketshospitalhospitalsHDHPplansswitchHDHPsthreecomparisongroupout-of-pocketnegotiatedchildbirthhigh-deductiblehealthrelativebasep = 0decreaselowerwhethercostschangeeffectsDATAHCCInon-HDHPsyearestimatedesignenrolleesdueshoppingOBJECTIVE:testenrollmentdifferSOURCES:Administrativemedicalclaimsdata20102014largecommercialinsurersUSstatesprovidedHealthCareCostInstituteSTUDYDESIGN:identifyemployergroupsswitched1subsequentenrollees'employersusetriple-differencechangeschoicesFinallyre-estimatemodelshospital-fixedCOLLECTION:samplechildbearingwomenenrolledemployer-sponsoredplanleast10peoplePRINCIPALFINDINGS:Switchingincreasescost$227p < 0001$790meaningfuleffecthospital-negotiated-$26756$5821associatedmarginallystatisticallysignificantincreasefewer$343096$5806-$512028Predicted$5702$5551primarilyconditionalusingCONCLUSIONS:Pricesresultsreinforcepreviousfindingspromotesuggestmayaffectpaidchildbirth?consumerbehaviorinsurancebenefit

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