I Pay, You Pay, Variable Co-Pay
The Next Generation of Health Insurance Design

One tool to mitigate health-care spending is increased cost sharing, which requires that patients pay a larger portion of the cost of a physician office visit, a hospitalization, or a prescription. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, consumer co-pays for physician visits and prescription drugs have been rising rapidly. While making out-of-pocket payments for substantive health services may both reduce the likelihood of unnecessary health services and save money, it may also increase the chance that a patient chooses not to fill an important prescription.

Is there a better approach than across-the-board increases in cost sharing? Can plans be designed effectively with cost-sharing structures that vary based on medical evidence of cost-effectiveness? Would such a change lead to better outcomes, lower costs, both, or neither? What can public health programs learn from the private-sector health insurance experience with cost sharing?

A. Mark Fendrick, M.D., co-director of the Center for Value-Based Insurance Design at the University of Michigan, and Mark Cullen, M.D., professor at Yale University School of Medicine and medical director for Alcoa, will each present recent research on the effects of variable or differential cost sharing. Mark V. Pauly, an economist at the University of Pennsylvania, and AEI visiting fellow Bill Thomas, former chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee will discuss this research from economic and political perspectives. Alex Brill, a research fellow at AEI, will moderate. The conference will begin with opening remarks by Peter R. Orszag, director of the Congressional Budget Office, who will discuss evidence on comparative effectiveness of medical treatment.

About the Author

 

Bill
Thomas
  • Bill Thomas, a former chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1978 to 2007. During his six-year chairmanship, he guided the enactment of $2 trillion in tax relief, including the Economic Growth and Tax Reconciliation Act of 2001, which reduced all ordinary income tax rates; the Jobs and Growth Tax Reconciliation Act of 2003, which reduced the tax rate on dividends and capital gains; and the Job Creation Act of 2004, which provided significant reforms for corporate tax policy.
  • Phone: 2028625830
    Email: bill.thomas@aei.org

 

Alex
Brill
  • Alex Brill, a former policy director and chief economist of the House Ways and Means Committee, also served on the staff of the President's Council of Economic Advisers (CEA). In Congress and at the CEA, Mr. Brill worked on a variety of economic and legislative policy issues, including dividend taxation, the alternative minimum tax, international tax policy, social security reform, defined benefit pension reform, and U.S. trade policy.

    At AEI, Mr. Brill studies the impact of tax policy in the U.S. economy; the fiscal, economic, and political consequences of stimulus legislation; health care reform, pharmaceutical spending, unemployment insurance reform; and financial innovation and technology.
  • Phone: 202-862-5931
    Email: alex.brill@aei.org
  • Assistant Info

    Name: Chad Hill
    Phone: 202-862-5862
    Email: chad.hill@aei.org

 

Mark V.
Pauly
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