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Background: On January 1, 2021, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services implemented a hospital price transparency rule. Consumerism as a means of reducing healthcare expenditure is predicated on informed consumers making discrete choices.
Study Design: For 10 months, immediately after a preoperative clinic visit at an academic medical center, patients and their surgeons were surveyed regarding their estimation of hospital cost and hospital reimbursement for the upcoming operation. Responses were compared to average institutional cost (fiscal year 2019) for Medicare patients undergoing a laparoscopic approach for each operation. We calculated the difference between actual reimbursement and cost with patients' estimates and actual reimbursement and cost with surgeons' estimates.
Results: Sixty-six questionnaires were collected from patients who underwent laparoscopic operations, that included cholecystectomy (n = 20), inguinal hernia (n = 17), umbilical hernia repair (n = 6), ventral hernia repair (n = 6), incisional hernia (n = 6), hiatal hernia repair (n = 1), and lipoma or cyst excision (n = 10). Patients' estimates of hospital cost exceeded actual hospital cost by a median of $4,502 and were less than hospital reimbursement by a median of $1,834. Surgeon estimates for direct cost were $825 less than hospital direct cost and $1,659 less than hospital reimbursement.
Conclusions: Patients as well as their surgeons do not estimate healthcare cost or remuneration accurately and therefore will be ineffective change agents in reducing surgical spending based on price transparency without further education of both parties. Patients consistently overestimated surgical cost while surgeons consistently underestimated surgical cost and reimbursement. It is likely that better-informed surgeons and patients are necessary prerequisites for Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services price transparency rules to be effective in reducing Medicare expenditures in surgery.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/XCS.0000000000000534 | DOI Listing |
J Pharm Policy Pract
September 2025
Jeffrey Cheah School of Medicine and Health Sciences (JCSMHS), Monash University Malaysia, Bandar Sunway, Malaysia.
Background: Medicine affordability is a critical component of a country's redistributive health policies aimed at ensuring equitable access to healthcare. This study aims to investigate key stakeholders' perspectives on pharmaceutical pricing control in Malaysia as the country is moving towards sustainable healthcare.
Methods: Semi-structured interviews ( = 16) were conducted with a purposive sampling of key stakeholders, which included practitioners and policymakers engaged in Malaysia's public health policy.
Proc Nutr Soc
September 2025
Institute for Health Transformation, Global Centre for Preventive Health and Nutrition, School of Health and Social Development, Faculty of Health, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia.
Healthy diets are unaffordable for billions of people worldwide, with food prices rising in high-, middle- and low-income nations in recent times. Despite widespread attention to this issue, recent actions taken to inform policy prioritisation and government responses to high food inflation have not been comprehensively synthesised. Our review summarises (i) innovative efforts to monitor national food and healthy diet price, ii) new policy responses adopted by governments to address food inflation and (iii) future research directions to inform new evidence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Coll Radiol
August 2025
Department of Health Services, Policy, and Practice, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, Rhode Island. Electronic address:
Purpose: The consolidation of radiology practices by hospitals and private equity (PE) firms has accelerated in recent years, reshaping the landscape of radiology practice ownership. There is limited systematic evidence on the growing prevalence of hospital and PE ownership in radiology and its association with negotiated prices for imaging services. The aim of this study was to examine how commercial insurance negotiated prices for radiologic services vary by practice ownership structure, including independent, hospital, and PE-affiliated radiology practices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
CSE, Vasavi College of Engineering, Hyderabad, Telangana, India.
AI has propelled the potential for moving toward personalized health and early prediction of diseases. Unfortunately, a significant limitation of many of these deep learning models is that they are not interpretable, restricting their clinical utility and undermining trust by clinicians. However, all existing methods are non-informative because they report generic or post-hoc explanations, and few or none support patient-specific, accurate, individualized patient-level explanations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFoods
August 2025
Rattanakosin International College of Creative Entrepreneurship, Rajamangala University of Technology Rattanakosin, Nakhon Pathom 73170, Thailand.
Green food serves as a bridge connecting healthy lifestyles with environmental values, particularly in the context of sustainable consumption transitions. However, existing research lacks a systematic understanding of how consumers negotiate cognitive evaluations and emotional responses when forming green food purchase intentions. This study addresses that gap by exploring the cognitive-affective negotiation process underlying consumers' green food choices.
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