
Photographer John Fitzpatrick
Stylist
Did you ever play the whac-a-mole game? As Wikipedia describes it,
Dr. Trivedi, et. al., compared changes in utilization in outpatient and inpatient care among Medicare enrollees that increased copayments for ambulatory care. The researchers compared a controlled utilization between enrollees who had increased ambulatory care copayments versus those whose payments did not change.
The outcome: increasing copayments for ambulatory care services resulted in fewer outpatient visits by Medicare enrollees, and increasing inpatient admissions to hospitals.
Health Populi’s Hot Points: The conclusion we draw is that raising cost-sharing for ambulatory care can have adverse consequences — and ironically, drive health spending up.
This study speaks to the important art of value-based benefit design: art and, of course, actuarial science, too. The U.S. health system has a long history of whac-a-mole economics: when inpatient payment rates got cut for hospitals, for example, hospitals rushed to build ambulatory surgery centers and outpatient rehab facilities.
In the meantime, whac-a-mole will continue until those who design health plans recognize the nature of incentives and their consequences. For more on value-based benefit designs, check out Dr. David Hom‘s work at Healthcare Innovation as well as Health Affairs’ article by Michael Chernew et. al. on the evidence of value-based plan design.





Thanks to Jennifer Castenson for
Jane joined host Dr. Geeta "Dr. G" Nayyar and colleagues to brainstorm the value of vaccines for public and individual health in this challenging environment for health literacy, health politics, and health citizen grievance.
I'm grateful to be part of the Duke Corporate Education faculty, sharing perspectives on the future of health care with health and life science companies. Once again, I'll be brainstorming the future of health care with a cohort of executives working in a global pharmaceutical company.