info@healthcostinstitute.org

mediA@healthcostinstitute.org

  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • Link
Search
Health Care Cost Institute
  • Home
  • About US
    • HCCI Data
    • HCCI Staff
      • CEO
      • Careers
    • Financial Statements
    • Governing Board 
  • Data Tools
    • Data Access Hub
    • HCCI Vitals
    • Healthprices.org
    • HMI
    • DataNerd
  • Research
    • Original Reports
    • HCCUR
    • Vitals HMI
Search

Outpatient Spending

  • ER spending among the commercially insured continued to rise in 2016, driven by the price and use of high severity cases (2009-2016)

    Tags: Commercially Insured, Emergency Room, Geographic Variation, Outpatient Spending, Prices, Utilization
    ER spending among the commercially insured continued to rise in 2016, driven by the price and use of high severity cases (2009-2016)
    John Hargraves; Kevin Kennedy
    May 30, 2018

    HCCI recently expanded its reporting on emergency room (ER) spending trends to include the most recent data available (2016). We characterize trends in spending, price, and utilization for the five Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes designed to capture the level of severity and complexity of every ER visit. While average prices for all five ER…

    Read more: ER spending among the commercially insured continued to rise in 2016, driven by the price and use of high severity cases (2009-2016)
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • NBER: The Price Ain’t Right? Hospital Prices and Health Spending on the Privately Insured

    Tags: Commercially Insured, Inpatient Spending, Market Concentration, NBER, Outpatient Spending, Peer Reviewed Journals
    NBER: The Price Ain’t Right? Hospital Prices and Health Spending on the Privately Insured
    Zack Cooper, Stuart Craig, Martin Gaynor, John Van Reenan
    May 1, 2018

    ABSTRACT: We use insurance claims data covering 28 percent of individuals with employer-sponsored health insurance in the US to study the variation in health spending on the privately insured, examine the structure of insurer-hospital contracts, and analyze the variation in hospital prices across the nation. Health spending per privately insured beneficiary differs by a factor of…

    Read more: NBER: The Price Ain’t Right? Hospital Prices and Health Spending on the Privately Insured
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • Under Pressure – Adults with Hypertension are Spending Increasingly More on Health Care

    Tags: Chronic Conditions, Drug Spending, Hypertension, Outpatient Spending, Physician Spending
    Under Pressure – Adults with Hypertension are Spending Increasingly More on Health Care
    William Johnson, Dan Fulop, Sally Rodriguez
    March 14, 2018

    This issue brief compares trends in health care spending from 2012 to 2016 for adults with employer-sponsored insurance who were diagnosed with hypertension to those not diagnosed with hypertension. It also considers how changes in prescription drug spending compare to changes in prescription drug use for adults with a hypertension diagnosis.  

    Read more: Under Pressure – Adults with Hypertension are Spending Increasingly More on Health Care
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • Crain’s Chicago Business: This fast-growing doctors group is betting it all on hips and knees

    Tags: Guroo, Outpatient Spending, Shoppable Services
    Crain’s Chicago Business: This fast-growing doctors group is betting it all on hips and knees
    Chicago Business
    March 2, 2018

    Baby boomers are living longer, getting their aching hips and knees replaced as they age. That puts Illinois Bone & Joint Institute in the sweet spot of medicine. Hip and knee replacements are among the most common surgeries in the U.S.—and they’re pricey. Everything involved in replacing one, from surgery to the weeks of rehab…

    Read more: Crain’s Chicago Business: This fast-growing doctors group is betting it all on hips and knees
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • Medical Care: The Differential Effects of Insurance Mandates on Health Care Spending for Children’s Autism Spectrum Disorder

    Tags: Autism, Children, Commercially Insured, Inpatient Spending, Medical Care, Outpatient Spending, Peer Reviewed Journals
    Medical Care: The Differential Effects of Insurance Mandates on Health Care Spending for Children’s Autism Spectrum Disorder
    Molly Candon, Colleen Barry, Andrew Epstein, Steven Marcus, Alene Kennedy-Hendricks, Ming Xie, David Mandell
    March 1, 2018

    ABSTRACT Objectives: There is substantial variation in treatment intensity among children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). This study asks whether policies that target health care utilization for ASD affect children differentially based on this variation. Specifically, we examine the impact of state-level insurance mandates that require commercial insurers to cover certain treatments for ASD for…

    Read more: Medical Care: The Differential Effects of Insurance Mandates on Health Care Spending for Children’s Autism Spectrum Disorder
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • Top Spenders Among the Commercially Insured Increased Spending Concentration and Consistent Turnover from 2013 to 2015

    Tags: Commercially Insured, Drug Spending, Inpatient Spending, Out-of-Pocket, Outpatient Spending, Physician Spending, Top Spenders
    Top Spenders Among the Commercially Insured Increased Spending Concentration and Consistent Turnover from 2013 to 2015
    William Johnson, Sally Rodriguez
    February 1, 2018

     This issue brief explores the distribution of health care spending among commercially insured individuals, with a focus on the top 5 percent of spenders and turnover within that group from year to year. It considers the share of spending incurred by this group of top spenders, how those dollars are distributed among the health care…

    Read more: Top Spenders Among the Commercially Insured Increased Spending Concentration and Consistent Turnover from 2013 to 2015
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • Advisory Board: ED visits down – but ED facility fee spending is up, Vox analysis suggests

    Tags: Emergency Room, Outpatient Spending, Prices, Vox
    Advisory Board: ED visits down – but ED facility fee spending is up, Vox analysis suggests
    Advisory Board
    December 8, 2017

    Spending on emergency department (ED) facility fees rose steadily between 2009 and 2015, even as the overall number of ED fees billed declined, according to an analysis of Health Care Cost Institute (HCCI) data, Sarah Kliff writes for Vox. However, the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) is pushing back against the findings, noting that…

    Read more: Advisory Board: ED visits down – but ED facility fee spending is up, Vox analysis suggests
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • Healthcare Dive: ER facility fees skyrocket faster than outpatient or overall healthcare spending

    Tags: Emergency Room, Outpatient Spending
    Healthcare Dive: ER facility fees skyrocket faster than outpatient or overall healthcare spending
    Healthcare Dive
    December 5, 2017

     By: Les Masterson Dive Brief: Hospital emergency room (ER) facility fees increased 89% between 2009 and 2015, which is twice as fast as outpatient care and four times as fast as overall healthcare spending, reported Vox and Health Care Cost Institute (HCCI) in a new report. Vox and HCCI analyzed 70 million insurance bills for…

    Read more: Healthcare Dive: ER facility fees skyrocket faster than outpatient or overall healthcare spending
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • ProPublica: A Hospital Charged $1,877 to Pierce a 5-Year-Old’s Ears. This Is Why Health Care Costs So Much.

    Tags: Outpatient Spending, Prices
    ProPublica: A Hospital Charged $1,877 to Pierce a 5-Year-Old’s Ears. This Is Why Health Care Costs So Much.
    ProPublica
    November 28, 2017

    By: Marshall Allen This story was co-published with NPR’s Shots blog. Two years ago, Margaret O’Neill brought her 5-year-old daughter to Children’s Hospital Colorado because the band of tissue that connected her tongue to the floor of her mouth was too tight. The condition, literally called being “tongue-tied,” made it hard for the girl to…

    Read more: ProPublica: A Hospital Charged $1,877 to Pierce a 5-Year-Old’s Ears. This Is Why Health Care Costs So Much.
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • Health Affairs: Insurer Market Power Lowers Prices In Numerous Concentrated Provider Markets

    Tags: Health Affairs, Inpatient Spending, Market Concentration, Outpatient Spending, Peer Reviewed Journals
    Health Affairs: Insurer Market Power Lowers Prices In Numerous Concentrated Provider Markets
    Richard Scheffler, Daniel Arnold
    September 1, 2017

     ABSTRACT: Using prices of hospital admissions and visits to five types of physicians, we analyzed how provider and insurer market concentration—as measured by the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI)—interact and are correlated with prices. We found evidence that in the range of the Department of Justice’s and Federal Trade Commission’s definition of a moderately concentrated market (HHI of…

    Read more: Health Affairs: Insurer Market Power Lowers Prices In Numerous Concentrated Provider Markets
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
«
1 2 3 4 5
»

Enhance your research using customized data analysis

Are you interested in a specific health care topic? HCCI can use our commercial and government data resources and unique analytic experience to help you. Just reach out!

Partner with us

About

We are a mission-driven, independent, nonprofit organization situated at the nexus of data, analytics, and action.

Contact

1100 G Street NW, Suite 600
Washington DC, 20005

info@healthcostinstitute.org
media@healthcostinstitute.org

Research

HCCI Publications
Research Resources

Data

Data Access Hub
Data Tools

Quick Links

Partner with HCCI
HCCI Newsletter
Careers

  • LinkedIn
  • X
  • Link
  • Bluesky

© 2025 Health Care Cost Institute Inc.
Unless explicitly noted, the content on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0 License

Scroll to Top