info@healthcostinstitute.org

mediA@healthcostinstitute.org

  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • Link
Search
Health Care Cost Institute
  • Home
  • Data
    • ESI Data Access Hub
    • Data Tools
    • Healthy Marketplace Index
    • Price Transparency Tool
  • Research
    • Original Reports
    • Health Care Cost & Utilization Report 
    • Health Care Vitals
    • Latest HCCI Reports
  • About HCCI
    • About Us
    • HCCI Staff
    • CEO & President
    • Careers
    • Governing Board 
Search

Commercially Insured

  • Impact of New Technology on Prices and Use: A Case Examination of Robot-Assisted Surgeries

    Tags: Commercially Insured, Inpatient Spending, Technology, Utilization
    Impact of New Technology on Prices and Use: A Case Examination of Robot-Assisted Surgeries
    Aaron Bloschichak
    June 12, 2020

    Surgery accounts for the largest share of inpatient and outpatient spending among individuals with employer-sponsored insurance, representing 49 percent of inpatient spending and 37 percent of outpatient spending in 2018 according to HCCI’s most recent annual report. In recent years, the number of surgical procedures performed using robot assistance has increased dramatically. Intuitive, Inc., which…

    Read more: Impact of New Technology on Prices and Use: A Case Examination of Robot-Assisted Surgeries
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • Consumer-Directed Health Plan Enrollment Rises in All Cities over 10 Years (2008 to 2017)

    Tags: 10 Year Trend, Commercially Insured, Consumer-Directed Health Plans, Geographic Variation, Out-of-Pocket, Spending
    Consumer-Directed Health Plan Enrollment Rises in All Cities over 10 Years (2008 to 2017)
    John Hargraves and Aaron Bloschichak
    June 10, 2020

    Recent analysis by HCCI finds that enrollment in consumer-directed health plans (CDHPs) increased dramatically since 2008. Nationally, nearly a third of commercially insured individuals were enrolled in a CDHP in 2017, up from 7.5% in 2008. Over ten years, enrollment in CDHPs doubled in 85 of the 88 metro areas studied. High-deductible health plans (HDHPs) have become increasingly common…

    Read more: Consumer-Directed Health Plan Enrollment Rises in All Cities over 10 Years (2008 to 2017)
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • How often do providers bill out of network?

    Tags: Commercially Insured, Out-of-Network
    How often do providers bill out of network?
    Jean Fuglesten Biniek, John Hargraves, Bill Johnson, and Kevin Kennedy
    May 28, 2020

    In recent analysis, we document extensive variation across states and metropolitan areas in the frequency of out-of-network visits among individuals with health insurance provided by an employer. These differences raise the question of whether individual providers bill out of network at dissimilar rates. To explore whether a small group of providers are responsible for most…

    Read more: How often do providers bill out of network?
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • Understanding Variation in Spending on Childbirth Among the Commercially Insured

    Tags: Commercially Insured, Maternal Health, Prices, Spending
    Understanding Variation in Spending on Childbirth Among the Commercially Insured
    William Johnson, Anna Milewski, Katie Martin, Elianna Clayton
    May 13, 2020

    Childbirth is the most frequent reason for an inpatient admission in the United States, and Cesarean-section (C-section) is the most common operating room procedure in an inpatient hospital stay. Among people who get insurance through an employer, the combination of labor, delivery, and newborn care makes up nearly one in six dollars spent on inpatient…

    Read more: Understanding Variation in Spending on Childbirth Among the Commercially Insured
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • Compared to What? Baseline Understanding of the Distribution of Hospital Care

    Tags: Commercially Insured, HCCUR, Inpatient Spending, Prices, Utilization
    Compared to What? Baseline Understanding of the Distribution of Hospital Care
    Jean Fuglesten Biniek, Katie Martin, and John Hargraves
    April 1, 2020

    The pandemic of a new coronavirus, COVID-19, is increasing demand on hospitals as unprecedented numbers of people with respiratory disease seek treatment. In addition to straining hospital resources directly related to care of COVID-19, the outbreak may also displace other types of care. In this analysis, we hope to inform the understanding of the distribution…

    Read more: Compared to What? Baseline Understanding of the Distribution of Hospital Care
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • What if Price Transparency Reduced Commercial Price Variation?

    Tags: Commercially Insured, Prices, Spending, Transparency
    What if Price Transparency Reduced Commercial Price Variation?
    Kevin Kennedy, William Johnson, and John Hargraves
    January 29, 2020

    As previous reports have indicated, there is widespread price variation in the U.S. commercial health care system. Many studies have shown that prices are dramatically different not only across geographies, but they vary substantially even within the same market for the same service. For example, we found that prices for the same blood tests could…

    Read more: What if Price Transparency Reduced Commercial Price Variation?
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • CMS-specified shoppable services accounted for 12% of 2017 health care spending among individuals with employer-sponsored insurance

    Tags: Commercially Insured, Inpatient Spending, Out-of-Pocket, Outpatient Spending, Shoppable Services, Utilization
    CMS-specified shoppable services accounted for 12% of 2017 health care spending among individuals with employer-sponsored insurance
    Aaron Bloschichak, Anna Milewski, Katie Martin
    January 16, 2020

    In response to high and growing health care spending, policymakers have proposed improving price transparency as a solution. Several such proposals rely on consumers taking action on publicly available information for shoppable services – generally, non-emergency services that a person could choose more deliberately. In 2021, hospitals will be required to display, in a consumer-friendly manner,…

    Read more: CMS-specified shoppable services accounted for 12% of 2017 health care spending among individuals with employer-sponsored insurance
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • International comparisons of health care prices from the 2017 iFHP survey

    Tags: Administered Drugs, Commercially Insured, Drug Spending, Inpatient Spending, Outpatient Spending, Prices
    International comparisons of health care prices from the 2017 iFHP survey
    John Hargraves and Aaron Bloschichak
    December 17, 2019

    The International Federation of Health Plans (iFHP), a CEO network of the global health insurance industry based in London, in partnership with the Health Care Cost Institute (HCCI) in the United States, and iFHP member companies in eight countries, today published the latest International Comparison of Health Prices Report. The report compares the median prices…

    Read more: International comparisons of health care prices from the 2017 iFHP survey
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • JAMA Research Letter: Primary Care Spending in the Commercially Insured Population

    Tags: Commercially Insured, JAMA, Peer Reviewed Journals, Primary Care
    JAMA Research Letter: Primary Care Spending in the Commercially Insured Population
    Julie Reiff, Niall Brennan, Jean Fuglesten Biniek
    December 10, 2019

    ​Using HCCI’s data, we assessed the share among individuals younger than 65 years covered by employer-sponsored insurance from 2013 to 2017.  We assessed primary care spending using 2 main definitions: a definition which included the total spending on services rendered by primary care clinicians (broad definition) and one where only CPT codes for specific services specified as…

    Read more: JAMA Research Letter: Primary Care Spending in the Commercially Insured Population
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
  • How common is out-of-network billing?

    Tags: Commercially Insured, Emergency Room, Geographic Variation, Mental Health and Substance Use, Out-of-Network, Surprise Billing
    How common is out-of-network billing?
    John Hargraves and Jean Fuglesten Biniek
    November 21, 2019

    Congress is considering legislation to address “surprise bills”, which occur when a person visits an in-network facility, but receives services from a provider that is outside of their insurer’s network. Bills in both the House and Senate include provisions to determine a benchmark rate for out-of-network payments based on what in-network providers of the same…

    Read more: How common is out-of-network billing?
    • Facebook
    • X
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest
«
1 2 3 4 … 6
»

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