Physician Prices And The Cost And Quality Of Care For Commercially Insured Patients

Health Aff (Millwood). 2020 May;39(5):800-808. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2019.00237.

Abstract

We analyzed the relationship between prices paid to 30,549 general internal medicine physicians and the cost and quality of care for 769,281 commercially insured adults. The highest-price physicians were paid more than twice as much per service, on average, as the lowest-price physicians were. Total annual costs for patients of the highest-price physicians were $996 (20 percent) higher than costs for patients of the lowest-price physicians were, and this variation was not explained by differences in use. Physician prices were not associated with quality: Among physicians in the same hospital referral region, we did not find significant differences between patients of the highest-price physicians and patients of lowest-price physicians in the likelihood of experiencing an ambulatory care-sensitive hospitalization or being readmitted within thirty days of hospital discharge. There were also no differences between the highest- and lowest-price physicians for these quality outcomes for high-need patients. Policy makers need more information on the causes and consequences of the large disparities in prices paid to physicians.

Keywords: Access and use; Chronic disease; Employer-sponsored insurance; Health policy; Insurance claims; Physician payments; Physician prices; Physicians; Prescription drug costs; Readmission rates; costs and spending; quality of care.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Ambulatory Care
  • Humans
  • Physicians*
  • Quality of Health Care
  • United States