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  • - [Narrator] At a hospital in Modesto, California, the price

  • for a routine knee replacement surgery

  • might be about $16,000 or $53,000 or even $81,000.

  • How is a hospital able to charge

  • such an extreme range of prices for the same surgery?

  • The vast price differences are driven

  • in part by the secret rates hospitals negotiate

  • with health insurers, for everything

  • from an MRI to open-heart surgery.

  • - It depends on the leverage that the hospital has.

  • It depends on the leverage the insurer has.

  • Depends on sort of who's good at negotiating.

  • And until recently, those rates tended to be secret.

  • - [Narrator] But they're not so secret anymore.

  • Thanks to federal rules that required hospitals

  • to make their prices public in 2021.

  • Sutter Health is one of hundreds of hospital systems

  • now revealing their negotiated rates.

  • - People didn't know what their competitors were paying

  • and that limited, the negotiations in some ways.

  • - [Narrator] So, how exactly are these rates set?

  • Here's what goes into the secret price negotiations

  • between hospitals and insurance companies.

  • To understand how U.S. hospitals set their prices.

  • Let's take a look at publicly available data

  • from Sutter Health's Memorial Medical Center.

  • This chart shows the prices for billing code DRG 470

  • which is a routine hip or knee replacement surgery.

  • The different price tags depend on the insurance plan,

  • covering the procedure.

  • If you look at the lowest and most expensive rates,

  • you can see there's a pricing spread of more than $64,000.

  • Still, the data doesn't represent the full range of pricing.

  • The exact costs of certain insurance plans

  • are not available on the hospital's website.

  • - One takeaway has definitely been the broad range

  • of prices that are paid for the same service

  • in the same hospital.

  • You see this in Sutter's data, but you see it

  • across the board in lots of other hospitals' data.

  • - [Narrator] So, how do hospitals and insurance companies

  • come up with these numbers?

  • Hospitals typically have a sticker price,

  • often called the chargemaster rate.

  • This can be a starting point for negotiations

  • with insurance companies.

  • At Sutter Health Memorial, the chargemaster price

  • for a routine hip or knee replacement is set at $92,262

  • but there isn't an exact formula

  • for how this cost is calculated.

  • - A lot of factors influence chargemaster prices.

  • Hospitals typically will tweak them

  • to meet their financial targets.

  • The chargemaster rates are not typically really tied

  • to estimates of cost or value for the service provided.

  • Some hospitals are now trying to drill down and say, "Okay,

  • how much does it really cost

  • to do this particular procedure?"

  • But that's not historically been the case.

  • Insurers would rather have rates that are not actually tied

  • to the chargemaster and when they are negotiating

  • more successfully, they're not paying a rate

  • that's a discount off the chargemaster,

  • they're paying a rate set in some other way.

  • - [Narrator] Hospitals will often tweak chargemaster rates

  • based on their own financial targets.

  • Then insurers will often negotiate discounts

  • off these rates.

  • - Insurance companies tend to have more leverage

  • in the negotiations if they can deliver a lot of patients.

  • If they have a lot of market share in that area.

  • And also, if they're willing to design a plan

  • that has a limited number of hospitals

  • or a limited network so that the hospital knows

  • that its competitors are not going to be

  • in that plan or not as favored as they are.

  • And in that case, a hospital

  • will tend to offer a better rate.

  • - [Narrator] Insurers are essentially buying in bulk

  • using their large membership to get better deals.

  • Meanwhile, prestigious or large hospital systems

  • could have greater leverage in negotiations.

  • - What gives a hospital leverage or negotiating cloud

  • is basically being a must have system,

  • meaning that the insurer really needs

  • to have that hospital system to have a good plan

  • that will attract customers.

  • In the markets where Sutter Health has hospitals,

  • I think it would probably be difficult

  • for an insurer to create a strong network

  • that included no Sutter Health facilities.

  • They have some important facilities

  • and they are a powerful presence in their markets.

  • - [Narrator] In a statement, a spokesperson

  • from Sutter Health said, "It is the insurance companies

  • not the health systems who hold leverage

  • in these negotiations.

  • Sutter negotiates on behalf of our patients

  • to help ensure they can receive access to the clinicians

  • and facilities who can meet their healthcare needs".

  • Meanwhile, insurance companies have generally said

  • their contract negotiations with hospitals

  • achieve large overall savings for their members.

  • And comparing individual prices is not indicative

  • of cost-competitiveness.

  • The full impact of the contracts between hospitals

  • and insurers can be difficult to see directly

  • because the details of the negotiations often remain secret.

  • For instance, some contracts include restrictive provisions

  • sometimes called anti-steering clauses.

  • These clauses can prevent insurers from directing patients

  • to less expensive or better quality hospitals and doctors.

  • - Hospitals, when they have a lot of leverage

  • in a very powerful in their market,

  • they can sometimes win favorable contract terms

  • so they could get provisions in contracts that said

  • an insurer can't exclude their hospitals

  • from any of its plans, that all of its plans

  • must include that hospital systems, facilities.

  • - [Narrator] Insurance plans

  • offered under government programs

  • like Medicare and Medicaid tend to get the lowest rates

  • because they're tied to prices mandated

  • by federal and state agencies.

  • You can see this in the knee

  • and hip replacement surgery prices we showed you earlier.

  • - So, you'll see that all of the Medicare plans

  • are clustered around exactly that same number,

  • because it is related to what Medicare itself

  • pays for that service.

  • But then you'll see a big range of prices.

  • You'll see some around $53,000.

  • You see one as high as around $81,000.

  • And those are the negotiated rates

  • that the different insurers are paying.

  • - [Narrator] Because Medicaid and Medicare plans

  • tend to get lower rates.

  • Some hospitals say they need to rely

  • on the higher paying privately insured patients

  • for their revenue.

  • - There was a study that looked at more than 2,800 hospitals

  • over 10 years.

  • And they found that hospitals that boosted their margins

  • didn't cut their costs.

  • They actually improved their revenue by raising the rates

  • they charged to private insurers.

  • - [Narrator] A spokesperson from Sutter Health said,

  • "The rates paid by Medicaid and Medicare plans

  • generally don't cover the costs of care".

  • The prices, health insurance companies negotiate

  • affect consumers directly.

  • Throughout of pocket charges like deductibles

  • and indirectly by pushing up premiums for health coverage.

  • For instance, high deductible plans

  • can leave patients responsible

  • for thousands of dollars in costs

  • before their coverage kicks in.

  • Total spending on private health insurance

  • in the U.S. has increased by about 40% over the past decade,

  • according to federal figures.

  • - Patients who don't have any insurance at all

  • can sometimes be asked to pay a cash price

  • that is higher than what insurers pay it varies.

  • But some of these patients may also,

  • if they're low income, get financial assistance

  • in which case they get, discounts based on that,

  • or may have the whole bill forgiven.

  • - [Narrator] Despite the federal rules requiring hospitals

  • to make their prices public,

  • some hospitals still haven't fully revealed their rates.

  • On July 1st, the second phase

  • of the federal pricing transparency effort took effect.

  • Health insurers now have to reveal the prices they pay

  • to all healthcare providers, not just hospitals

  • but also doctor groups, surgery centers, and labs.

  • - When the federal government created these rules,

  • one of the ideas was to help people shop for services.

  • That's one question, will people look at these prices

  • and try to shop for care based on them?

  • The belief is that now

  • that those prices are becoming more transparent,

  • we'll see a narrower range of prices

  • because insurers and hospitals both will say, "Hey,

  • I see that other person's getting a better rate.

  • I want that rate".

  • And that will tend to narrow the big variation.

  • (light gentle music)

- [Narrator] At a hospital in Modesto, California, the price

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