Healthcare

Here’s how we can act to ensure we all can afford healthcare in the future

Navigating the complex world of healthcare feels nearly impossible for many Americans. Recently, the onus of understanding, managing, and paying for healthcare costs has been increasingly transferred to patients, forcing people to become healthcare consumers by default. Important financial decisions are being made with little to no knowledge of how the labyrinth of modern healthcare works.

The impact of these decisions is significant. Today, almost 10 percent of the typical American’s income is spent on out-of-pocket healthcare expenses. That number has nearly doubled from just 10 years ago, according to Deloitte. This trajectory shows no sign of slowing down.

{mosads}Increases in medical expenses to the consumer are the result of the rising cost of healthcare and the fact that in the most common plan designs, the patient now shares a greater percentage of the total cost with the plan sponsor than they may have in the past.

 

Increased plan premiums, higher deductibles, constant increases in the cost of medication, and more expensive procedures all combine to make healthcare very expensive. It is more important than ever that we as consumers engage in the management of our healthcare financial responsibility for the present and future.

Understanding the challenges at hand, how can Americans take back control to successfully manage their healthcare expenses?

The inevitable transformation to a consumer-centric healthcare model means we must retrain ourselves to be informed health care consumers. We need to pay attention and participate in benefit decisions that have not had a direct impact on our daily life or household budgets in the past.

This requires all stakeholders in the healthcare industry, whether health plans, employer groups, government agencies, providers or patients, accept this change is underway and place a renewed focus on understanding the system and improving the consumer experience. Providing visibility, price transparency and guidance throughout is the first step to a more engaged healthcare consumer and an engaged consumer is essential to creating sustainable infrastructure in the industry.

Building a new model demands change to the current service delivery and pricing. The industry must nurture consumers to be actively engaged and highly autonomous when it comes to healthcare decision-making. Consumers need to understand what is at stake for physical and financial health, as it is clear that the time for passive participation in healthcare is a thing of the past.  

Thomas Torre is it chief executive officer at Copatient. A technology enabled medical expense management company.


The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.