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Health Care Cost and Access Challenges
Persist
Issue
Brief No. 114
October 2007
Debra A. Draper, Paul B. Ginsburg
Little has changed in local health care markets since 2005 to break the
cycle of rising costs, falling insurance coverage and widening access
inequities, according to initial findings from the Center for Studying
Health System Change’s (HSC) 2007 site visits to 12 nationally
representative metropolitan communities (Including Indianapolis). As
intense competition among hospitals and physicians for profitable
specialty services continues, employers and health plans are looking to
consumers to take more responsibility for medical costs, lifestyle choices
and treatment decisions. While consumer-directed health plans have not
gained widespread adoption, other developments—including a heightened
emphasis on prevention and wellness, along with nascent provider cost and
quality information—are advancing health care consumerism. However,
concerns exist about whether these efforts will slow cost growth enough to
keep care affordable or whether the growing problem of affordability will
derail efforts to decrease the rising number of uninsured Americans and
stymie meaningful health care reform.
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