Healthcare Financial News
Medical costs are on the rise again in 2010. Read the article and then go to the report from Milliman that details the rise in costs for the third straight year in a row.
The medical costs paid by and on behalf of a typical U.S. family of four reached $18,074 in 2010, up 7.8 percent over the 2009 amount of $16,771, according to the 2010 Milliman Medical Index. For the third consecutive year, the annual rate of increase has been less than 8 percent, but the dollar increase is the highest in the past 10 years. Inpatient and outpatient facility services combined represent 48 percent of the total annual medical costs, up from 47 percent last year, according to the index. Physician services represent 33 percent, prescription drugs represent 15 percent, and miscellaneous services represent 4 percent.
Over the past five years, pharmacy care and facility costs, especially outpatient facility costs, increased at a higher average annual rate than physician services, the report states. The largest dollar increase in 2010 was for inpatient facility care, which rose by $498 annually. The increase includes change in both utilization and average unit cost. Average unit cost reflects the negotiated charge for each service and the service mix, according to Milliman.
Most of the hospital and physician cost increases noted in the 2010 index have been driven by average unit cost, not utilization, which frames the future cost-control effort, according to the report. Hospital and physician services contributed $820 and $301, respectively, to the increase in total annual medical costs between 2009 and 2010, while pharmacy services contributed $151.
As in 2009, medical costs in three cities (Miami, New York, and Chicago) continue to surpass the national average by at least 10 percent. Costs in all three cities now exceed $20,000 for a typical family of four, with Miami at $22,089. Phoenix and Seattle continue to have costs much lower than the national average.