Three facts about health care spending
The facts matter when talking about health care spending. As policymakers continue discussions on ways to address high costs and abuse in the system, they need to take a look at all the stakeholders involved.
The facts matter when talking about health care spending. As policymakers continue discussions on ways to address high costs and abuse in the system, they need to take a look at all the stakeholders involved.
There is increasing talk about making changes to our health care system to lower costs for patients and address misaligned incentives. These are important conversations that could lead to meaningful improvements, but only if policymakers take a holistic approach to address all the health care drivers. Far too often, there is a singular focus on prescription medicines, ignoring the other parts of the supply chain that are key drivers of U.S. health care spending. Here are three key facts to help provide context to the conversation:
Spending on medicines is a small and stable share of total health care spending.
Insurers and their PBMs are siphoning money out of the system and into their pockets while driving up costs for patients.
Hospitals continue to be the primary driver of health care spending.
The facts matter when talking about health care spending. As policymakers continue discussions on ways to address high costs and abuse in the system, they need to take a look at all the stakeholders involved.
Learn more at PhRMA.org/Cost.