  
	
  
Ginsburg Testifies at House Energy and Commerce Health Panel on Transparency
Consumers Factoring in Cost and Quality when Making Health Care Decisions Remains Elusive Goal
News Release 
April 2, 2009 
 
 FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT: 
   
  Alwyn Cassil (202) 264-3484 or acassil@hschange.org 
 
 
WASHINGTON, DCDespite well-intentioned efforts in 
  recent years by government, employers, health plans and others to foster health 
  care price and quality transparency, most Americans still choose doctors and 
  hospitals the old-fashioned waythey rely on recommendations from friends and 
  families and physicians, economist Paul Ginsburg, Ph.D., president of the Center 
  for Studying Health System Change (HSC), told Congress today. 
"Despite extensive evidence that the quality of U.S. health care is uneven 
  at best and that Americans pay more for health care than citizens in any other 
  industrialized nation with worse results, health care price and quality transparency 
  in the United States has yet to capture a significant consumer following," 
  Ginsburg testified at a hearing of the U.S. House Energy and Commerce health 
  subcommittee on "Making Health Care Work for American Families: Saving 
  Money, Saving Lives."  
In his testimony, Ginsburg made three main points: 
- On the cost front, insured Americans face few incentives to consider 
  price when choosing providers because they typically pay the same out of pocket 
  if they use an in-network provider. On the quality front, few consumers believe 
  that quality differs significantly across providers and that these differences 
  can have serious-even life-or-death-consequences.
 
-  Unlike price transparency, where consumer needs vary greatly depending 
  on whether they are insured or not, and if they are insured, how their benefits 
  are structured, theoretically all consumers can benefit from the same information 
  on the quality of care provided by individual physicians, medical groups, hospitals 
  and other providers. To that end, the potential audience for credible, understandable 
  and actionable health care quality information is significant. A critical first 
  step is to raise consumer awareness of the existence and serious implications 
  of provider quality gaps.
 
-  Some advocates oversell the potential of greater price and quality transparency, 
  creating the illusion that other steps need not be taken to address the nations 
  serious problems with health care affordability and quality. Increased transparency 
  is, in most cases, a good thing, but increased transparency alone cannot remedy 
  the underperforming U.S. health care system.
 
 
The Center for Studying Health System Change is a nonpartisan policy research 
  organization committed to providing objective and timely research on the nations 
  changing health system to help inform policy makers and contribute to better 
  health care policy. HSC, based in Washington, D.C., is funded principally by 
  the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and is affiliated with Mathematica Policy 
  Research, Inc. 
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