Report shows American families consistently delay healthcare payments
until they have ability to pay, illustrates clear link between financial
health and healthcare spending
Related Biotechnology, Pharmaceutical and Healthcare News
Today the JPMorgan Chase Institute released a first-ever look at
out-of-pocket healthcare spending by US consumers, using the real
financial transactions of 2.3 million Americans. The data evaluates
spending on a month-to-month basis, at the state, metro, and county
level, showing how spending habits changed over a four-year period from
2013-2016.
The report, Paying
Out-of-Pocket: The Healthcare Spending of 2 Million US Families,
shows that families consistently delay healthcare payments until they
have more liquid assets at their disposal. Healthcare payments
noticeably spike in the months of March and April, when the majority of
American households receive their tax refunds.
"The reality is that many American families don’t have the cash buffer
to withstand the volatility created by out-of-pocket healthcare
payments, and we need to better understand the correlation between
financial health and physical health," said Diana Farrell,
President and CEO, JPMorgan Chase Institute. "For the first time
ever, we are able to look at the real impact of healthcare payments on
the pocketbooks of American families and how these expenditures fit in
to their larger financial condition. These data can serve as a resource
for policymakers at the federal, state, and local level to better
understand how healthcare policy decisions affect their constituents in
very tangible ways."
Some of the report’s key takeaways include:
A clear correlation exists between timing of healthcare payments
and an account-holder’s ability to pay, with the largest payments
taking place in the years and months with increased liquid assets.
This finding emphasizes the clear link between a family’s financial
health and their access to healthcare services.
The report found a clear spike in payments during the months of
March and April, when nearly 80 percent of tax filers receive tax
refunds.
There is significant variation of out-of-pocket expenses among and
within states, emphasizing the important role of states in shaping
healthcare policy. Colorado families spent the most out of pocket,
while families in Louisiana and Oklahoma spent the most as a percent
of income. California was among the lowest in terms of both raw dollar
amounts and payments as a share of income.
As part of this report, the JPMorgan Chase Institute has created
online data
visualization assets to illustrate these disparities and is
providing downloadable payment data with information broken down
to metro and county levels.
Out-of-pocket payments grew each year since 2013, but have remained
a stable share of income, also known as “burden.” However, women,
low-income families and pre-seniors are bearing the highest cost burden.
The finding merits further study to establish whether these higher
payments represent broader healthcare utilization or a clear expense
burden for populations that can afford it the least.
Families that are in the top 10 percent of healthcare spending in a
given year tend to remain the highest spenders on a year-over-year
basis, emphasizing the substantial cost of chronic conditions and
long-term healthcare needs.
Doctor, dental and hospital payments accounted for more than half
of out-of-pocket payments. While doctor payments accounted for the
greatest volume of expenditures, dental and hospital payments were
much more significant in terms of expense.
The JPMorgan Chase Institute report is based on a new data asset, the JPMorgan
Chase Institute Healthcare Out-of-Pocket Spending Panel (JPMCI
HOSP). The asset was constructed using a sample of 2.3 million
de-identified regular Chase customers age 18 to 64 between January 2013
and December 2016. The Institute defined out-of-pocket healthcare
spending as any observed payments to healthcare providers and
drugstores, including co-payments, co-insurance, deductibles, and other
point-of-service medical, dental, or drug spending.
Out-of-pocket healthcare spending grew between 2013 and 2016 but
remained a relatively constant share of take-home income.
The average out-of-pocket healthcare spending in 2016 was $714 and
the median was $276. Out-of-pocket healthcare spending grew at an
average annual rate of 4.3 percent and a total of 14 percent from
$629 in 2013 to $714 in 2016.
Healthcare spending measured in terms of financial burden was
relatively stable between 2013 and 2016, hovering around 1.6
percent as a share of take-home income and 1.2 percent of total
spending.
The financial burden of out-of-pocket healthcare spending was
highest for older, low-income, and female account holders
Female account holders spent 1.8 percent of take-home income in
2016 on healthcare compared to 1.5 among male account holders.
The bottom income quintile of account holders spent 2.8 percent of
take-home income on out-of-pocket healthcare costs in 2016,
compared to only 1.0 percent of take-home income for the top
income quintile of households.
Eighteen to 25-year-olds spent just 1.2 percent of take-home
income on out-of-pocket healthcare expenses, while 55 to
64-year-olds spent 1.9 percent.
Doctor, dental, and hospital payments accounted for more than half
of observed spending, with dental and hospital payments less frequent
but larger in magnitude.
Payments to doctors’ offices (22 percent), dental offices (21
percent), and hospitals (12 percent) accounted for 55 percent of
healthcare spending in 2016.
Doctors' office and dental payments varied notably in frequency
and magnitude, as more than half of families (52 percent) made
payments (with an average of $293) to doctors' offices in a given
year, compared to 32 percent of families making an average
out-of-pocket dental payment of $465.
Healthcare spending appears to be highly concentrated, with
healthcare outflows from the top 10 percent of spenders amounting to 9
percent of total take-home income.
In absolute dollar terms, the top 10 percent of spenders accounted
for 49 percent of total out-of-pocket spending in 2016, with an
average spend total of $3,482.
High-burden accounts tended to remain high-burden accounts. Almost
half of accounts in the top 10 percent of healthcare spending
burden in 2015 were there the following year.
Healthcare payments were highest in the months and years when
inflows were highest.
Months and years marked by higher healthcare spending tended to
coincide with months and years marked by higher take-home income
and liquid assets, indicating that ability to pay was associated
with demand for healthcare services.
In each of the four years studied, healthcare spending was highest
in March and April, which coincides with when roughly 80 percent
of tax filers receive a tax refund.
There was dramatic variation in out-of-pocket healthcare spending
between and within the 23 states studied in the report.
Average out-of-pocket healthcare spending in 2016 was highest in
Colorado ($916) and lowest in California ($596).
Large geographic variation also occurred within states. For
example, among five target states studied – California, Florida,
New York, Ohio, and Texas – there was a more than twofold
difference between the highest-spend and lowest-spend counties.
The JPMorgan Chase Institute is a global think tank dedicated to
delivering data-rich analyses and expert insights for the public good.
Its aim is to help decision makers–policymakers, businesses, and
nonprofit leaders–appreciate the scale, granularity, diversity, and
interconnectedness of the global economic system and use better facts,
timely data, and thoughtful analysis to make smarter decisions to
advance global prosperity. Drawing on JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s unique
proprietary data, expertise, and market access, the Institute develops
analyses and insights on the inner workings of the global economy,
frames critical problems, and convenes stakeholders and leading
thinkers. For more information visit: JPMorganChaseInstitute.com
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