Hospitals and Physicians Represent More Than Half of Total Health Spending January 10, 2020 Slide More than half of U.S. health spending went toward hospital and physician services in 2018. Learn more about the breakdown of the nation’s health spending in the Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker.
Surprise Bills Vary by Diagnosis and Type of Admission December 9, 2019 Issue Brief A new issue brief looks at the prevalence of potential surprise medical bills based on patient diagnosis, emergency visits, and type of inpatient admission.
What Do We Know About Infant Mortality in the U.S. and Comparable Countries? October 18, 2019 Slideshow
Employer Strategies to Reduce Health Costs and Improve Quality through Network Configuration September 25, 2019 Report Released in conjunction with the 2019 Employer Health Benefits Survey, a new report on the Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker provides insight from focus groups on the current strategies companies are using to manage rising costs and improve quality of care when configuring provider networks.
New Analysis of Large Employer Health Coverage: The Cost to Families for Health Coverage and Care Has Risen More Than 2X Faster Than Wages and 3X Faster Than Inflation Over the Last Decade August 15, 2019 News Release A new KFF analysis that looked at both premiums and other out-of-pocket costs shows that families with coverage through a large employer paid 67 percent more for their health benefits and care in 2018 than a decade earlier. In 2018, a typical family of four with large employer coverage spent…
Tracking the Rise in Premium Contributions and Cost-Sharing for Families with Large Employer Coverage August 15, 2019 Issue Brief An analysis of large employer health coverage on the Peterson-Kaiser Health System Tracker finds that the cost to families for health coverage and care has risen more than two times faster than wages and three times faster than inflation over the last decade.
Gun Violence Makes U.S. an Outlier, Not Mental Illness August 9, 2019 Slide Relative to other OECD countries, U.S. is an outlier for disease burden due to gun violence, but not for mental illness.
Among People with Employer Coverage, Those with Persistently High Spending for Several Years Averaged Almost $88,000 in Health Spending in 2017 July 24, 2019 News Release Among people with three consecutive years of coverage from a large employer, just 1.3 percent of enrollees accounted for 19.5 percent of overall health spending in 2017, finds a new KFF analysis. These “people with persistently high spending” – people in the top five percent of spending in each of…
A Look at People Who Have Persistently High Spending on Health Care July 23, 2019 Issue Brief This analysis looks at the amounts and types of health spending for people with employer-based health insurance who have continuing high health care spending. It finds that, among people with three consecutive years of coverage from a large employer, just 1.3 percent of enrollees accounted for almost 20 percent of…