What if CMS works with providers to understand why exactly do their rates not work. Is it a matter of unit economics? That alone cannot explain the cost increases in healthcare costs.
There was a story in New Yorker about a small startup that made a safer syringe, but it did not achieve widespread use to due to obstacles in the hospital procurement process. Makes me wonder if there are other analogous issues that also contribute to the cost increases.
> What if CMS works with providers to understand why exactly do their rates not work. Is it a matter of unit economics? That alone cannot explain the cost increases in healthcare costs.
Medicare rates are too low because... they're too low. Assume that a vaccine is sold by manufacturers for $100/unit wholesale. Medicare decides that they will pay providers $93 for every Medicare patient who receives the vaccine from that provider. There's no way to make those numbers work - if you're losing money per unit, you're going to lose money overall.
There was a story in New Yorker about a small startup that made a safer syringe, but it did not achieve widespread use to due to obstacles in the hospital procurement process. Makes me wonder if there are other analogous issues that also contribute to the cost increases.