ICYMI: The New York Times on the Need to Bring Down Underlying Medical Costs

Posted by The Campaign on April 21, 2010 at 5:49 AM

With each passing day, there seems to be a greater and greater recognition of the fact that health care costs are growing out of control.  And it is these costs that are driving the icnreases in premiums.  Thus if the country is going to get premium growth under control it has to design a strategy to get these underlying costs under control.

The New York Times picks up this line of argument today in its editorial "Health Care Reform and Massachusetts."  First, the NY Times recognizes that premium caps are "a short-term fix." 

The editorial goes on to argue:

"Like the rest of the nation, the state needs to deal with the underlying issue: the relentlessly rising prices charged by health care providers. Those are driven in part by costly new technologies and treatments. In Massachusetts, it is exacerbated by the outsized bargaining power of prestigious teaching hospitals and regionally dominant community hospitals."

This argument follows closely to the points made by AHIP in yesterday's hearing in front of the Senate HELP Committee.  The Committee held a hearing on premium increases.  The New York Times covered the hearing and picks up AHIP's point of view here:

"Congress, [AHIP's President and CEO Karen Ignagni] said, has largely ignored the cause of rising premiums: the explosive growth of medical costs and the power of hospitals and other health care providers to dictate prices.  Ms. Ignagni said the law imposed new requirements, taxes and fees on health plans, which could further drive up costs."

Tags: ICYMI, Costs, Premiums, Providers

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