There may be no area of federal policy that significantly impacts more Americans than steadily rising health care expenses. The country’s urgent need to rein in rising healthcare costs has resulted in a rare outpouring of recent bipartisan efforts to find practical solutions that can attract support beyond the base of one party or the other. Today, there is an unusual window of opportunity for serious action that could meaningfully help the American people. The Problem Solvers Caucus in the House is leading one of the most impressive bipartisan efforts in collaboration with Senator Susan Collins (Republican-Maine) and Democratic Senator Joe Manchin (Democrat-West Virginia). We have discussed with Problem Solvers Caucus leadership and staff the possibility of applying CommonSense American’s approach to their efforts on healthcare costs. They have expressed a keen interest in us choosing this as one of our three topics. In fact, we have been invited to meet with the full caucus of 24 Democrats and 24 Republicans.
Two areas of focus appear particularly promising. The first is prescription drug costs. The second is surprise medical billing.
Controlling Rising Prescription Drug Costs
Prescription drug prices are hitting Americans particularly hard. The average American now spends approximately $1,200 per year on their medications. It also turns out that it is an area where several practical solutions are attracting serious bipartisan support. President Trump has made this a top priority and has proposed concrete measures that rise above the typical partisan approaches. The focus of the Problem Solvers Caucus, in cooperation with Senators Collins and Manchin, is on prescription drug prices. So is the focus of a proposal by Senator Lamar Alexander (Republican-Tennessee), who chairs the Senate Health Committee and Senator Patty Murray (Democrat-Washington), the Ranking Member on that committee. Similar bipartisan proposals have been offered by the House Ways and Means and by the House Judiciary Committees.
Several themes run through the prescription drug cost proposals attracting bipartisan support. They focus on requiring greater transparency from manufacturers about drug costs. Many of the proposals focus on eliminating obstacles to fair competition, particularly providing access to lower cost generic drugs. Several proposals address what many consider to be abuse by drug manufacturers of their patents. For example, some drug manufactures, once one of their profitable patents expire, pay potential competitors not to manufacture generic versions so that they can continue to charge higher prices.
Limiting Surprise Medical Billing
Many patients are surprised by extraordinarily high emergency room visit costs. Unexpected high costs can happen particularly when hospitals use out-of-network specialists, clinicians, or ambulatory services even though the hospital itself is in-network for the patient’s insurance provider. Under current law essentially no legal limits exist to what patients can be charged for these out-of-network services. Even though patients believed that all the care was in-network, were not informed that they would be personally responsible for thousands-of-dollars in costs, and did not consent to the use of out-of-network clinicians (often because they were unconscious or otherwise incapacitated), the patients are still legally obligated to pay the surprise bills. If they are unable to pay them, they often face debt collectors and legal action.
President Trump has ordered an examination of the issue and several bipartisan bills have been introduced in Congress. Possible solutions include set rates (usually based on Medicare or Medicaid payment rates), an arbitration process where a neutral arbiter would decide on a reasonable hospital bill, and transparency efforts that make sure patients who are in the hospital for longer stays understand the costs of their care and are provided options.
Many of the prescription drug price proposals also include these provisions to control surprise medical billing. For example, the Problem Solvers Caucus is including surprise medical billing in their work. The proposal by Republican Senator Alexander and Democratic Senator Murray also addresses surprise medical billing.