The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth involves understanding what drives health care costs and how to target those drivers effectively. In this brief, we review the relative importance of different health care cost drivers, including insurance benefits design, price inflation, provider incentives, technological growth, and inefficient system performance. We analyze the impact of these factors on the growth of health care spending in the last decade, which has been concentrated in hospitals and felt most acutely in the private market. We find that unit prices and technology remain the most important cost drivers of this recent growth. In reviewing public and private payer initiati...
The United States spends nearly $8000 per person on health care annually. Even for a wealthy country...
We use data across states to examine the relation between HMO enrollment and medical spending. We fi...
Examines changes in U.S. healthcare spending, compared with other countries and per capita; what it ...
The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth ...
The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth ...
his chapter discusses reasons for the rapid increases in health care costs. Even though hospital ser...
Health care spending comprises about 16% of the total United States gross domestic product and conti...
Highlights findings from a study of growth rates in health insurance premiums and healthcare spendin...
Both private and public payers have experienced a persistent rise in health care spending that has e...
Since 1999, health care costs have been growing faster than national income. This rapid growth has o...
In the United States, health care technology has contributed to rising survival rates, yet health ca...
The last 40 years have seen a rapid increase of government expenditures on public welfare arrangemen...
Evidence suggests that growth in providers\u27 prices drives growth in health care spending on the p...
One commonly held explanation for high and rising health care costs in the United States points to t...
Summarizes preliminary findings and discussions from RWJF's Changes in Health Care Financing Organiz...
The United States spends nearly $8000 per person on health care annually. Even for a wealthy country...
We use data across states to examine the relation between HMO enrollment and medical spending. We fi...
Examines changes in U.S. healthcare spending, compared with other countries and per capita; what it ...
The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth ...
The growth of health care costs remains a serious concern in the United States. Slowing this growth ...
his chapter discusses reasons for the rapid increases in health care costs. Even though hospital ser...
Health care spending comprises about 16% of the total United States gross domestic product and conti...
Highlights findings from a study of growth rates in health insurance premiums and healthcare spendin...
Both private and public payers have experienced a persistent rise in health care spending that has e...
Since 1999, health care costs have been growing faster than national income. This rapid growth has o...
In the United States, health care technology has contributed to rising survival rates, yet health ca...
The last 40 years have seen a rapid increase of government expenditures on public welfare arrangemen...
Evidence suggests that growth in providers\u27 prices drives growth in health care spending on the p...
One commonly held explanation for high and rising health care costs in the United States points to t...
Summarizes preliminary findings and discussions from RWJF's Changes in Health Care Financing Organiz...
The United States spends nearly $8000 per person on health care annually. Even for a wealthy country...
We use data across states to examine the relation between HMO enrollment and medical spending. We fi...
Examines changes in U.S. healthcare spending, compared with other countries and per capita; what it ...