This text appeared in the ‘Top Story’ email newsletter sent on Jan. 4, 2025.
American health insurance seems to frustrate everyone. Patients complain that it’s expensive and complicated. Providers say it buries them in paperwork and can negatively affect patient care.Yet identifying a villain in our health payment story is no simple matter.
Symptoms
The most frequent complaint about health insurance is the cost. The cost of employer-sponsored insurance (ESI) for a hypothetical family of four in 2024 was $32,066, according to the actuarial firm Milliman. Of that total, about 58 percent would typically be paid by the employer.Providers are frustrated too. The administrative demands required by insurance companies are a particular pain point. Experian found that 65 percent of providers said meeting the insurers’ claim-submission requirements is harder now than before the pandemic.
Bruce Ratner, a former head of the Consumer Protection Division for New York City, advocates requiring health insurers to publish their denial rates. “That way, we choose our company based on denial rates, and that makes the companies work very hard to be competitive,” Ratner said in a Dec. 9 interview with CNBC.
Mark Bertolini, CEO of Oscar Health, advocates eliminating ESI to improve competition. “The ability of your employer to negotiate against the large insurance company that has much a larger relationship with the provider community is very stunted now,” Bertolini said in a Dec. 13 interview with CNBC.
Improving the transparency would help too, according to Richardson. One solution might be “a real transparency report that says, if a new Medicare requirement comes onboard, how do you show that effect was isolated within that Medicare book of business and not ... a ripple effect went into the other books of business,” she said.
Insurers could help by educating customers on how insurance works and the reasons behind their coverage decisions, according to Witty. “Together with employers, governments, and others who pay for care, we need to improve how we explain what insurance covers and how decisions are made,” he said.
Richardson likens the system to a house with several layers of shingles on the roof. “We have a house that is sustainable enough, but instead of removing the shingles to repair the roof, we keep cobbling new shingles onto it,” she said. “The very house itself is going to collapse under this patchwork of things we keep doing.”