Massachusetts consumers soon will have access to information long kept confidential by the healthcare industry: The prices individual hospitals are paid by insurers for performing specific procedures - data state officials hope will encourage comparison shopping and reduce medical costs.
State regulators, who approved the plan yesterday, said their goal is to begin posting the information on the Internet by March. They will spend the next few months deciding what treatment and procedures will be included in the data.
The move by the state's new Health Care Quality and Cost Council makes Massachusetts one of the first states to make this normally secret information public. New Hampshire recently began disclosing similar information for care, including emergency room visits, CT and MRI scans, arthroscopic knee surgery, and childbirth.
The state's mandatory health insurance law requires insurers and hospitals to disclose to the state payments for procedures, which are negotiated rates that take into account a variety of factors, including discounts for insurers that direct large numbers of patients to a hospital. The Legislature created the council to oversee the program, among other duties.
Monday, September 24, 2007
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