Differs from Insured Hospitalizations
According to Tracey Walker, Senior Editor of Healthcare Executive News on March 13, 2009, the number of uninsured hospitalizations increased by 34%, over the last 10-year period, and the number of Medicaid hospitalizations increased by 36%. However, a newt report from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) suggests the number of privately insured hospitalizations remained about the same.
AHRQ Report
According to the report, hospital charges increased for the uninsured faster than for overall hospital charges (76% for compared with 69% for all hospital stays). The average hospital charge for an uninsured stay in 2006 was $19,400 compared to $11,000 in 1997 (after adjusting for inflation). The average length of stay for the uninsured remained the same at about 4 days per hospital visit. Other findings included:
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Compared to all hospital stays, uninsured hospitalizations begin in the emergency department much more frequently (60% for the uninsured compared to 44% for all hospital stays).
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The number of uninsured hospitalizations for skin infections rose sharply over the 10-year period, increasing from about 28,000 stays in 1997 to about 75,000 stays in 2006. Early appropriate outpatient treatment for skin infections can usually prevent the need for hospitalization.
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There was a 36% increase in hospitalizations billed to Medicaid during the 10-year period.
Assessment
According to AHRQ, on average the costs (not charges) to provide hospital care to the uninsured are about $1,500 less expensive ($6,800 vs. $8,400 per hospital stay) than costs for all other hospital stays.
Assessment
Lack of health insurance has serious consequences on individuals and societies. For example, the uninsured may be more likely to delay or forgo necessary medical care until eventual hospitalization makes care much more expensive. And philosophically,
“As spending on Medicaid increases; the number of uninsured hospitalizations ought to decrease proportionally—adjusted for population increases”
So says, Hope Hetico; RN, MHA, CMP™ of www.HealthcareFinancials.com.
“But, this was not the case, and determining exactly why will require more studies.”
Conclusion
And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Does a similar inverse relationship hold for public versus private education, housing and transportation?
Why or why not? Some pundits wonder if it is due to private entities having more “skin-in-the game?” Please opine?
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Filed under: Health Economics, Health Insurance, Healthcare Finance, Insurance Matters, Surveys and Voting | Tagged: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, AHRQ, Health Insurance, hospital admissions, hospital charges, hospital costs, hospital stays, hospitalizations, insured patients, uninsured patients |















Moral Hazard,
AUSTIN, Texas – Just nine people accounted for nearly 2,700 of the emergency room visits in the Austin area during the past six years at a cost of $3 million to taxpayers and others, according to a report.
Link: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29998460
This is the kid of non-sense that occurs when patients have no, or too little, skin in the game. We need better databases, and more administrative electronic collaboration; not clinical eHRs at this time.
Anonymous MD
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HHS Hospital Compare
ER thru-put data here:
http://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov/staticpages/for-consumers/EDWaitTimes.aspx?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1
Jed
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