More M.D.s asking for deductible up front

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Spurred by higher co-pays and the ability to estimate billing amounts faster, more doctors are requiring patients to pay their full co-pays at the time of the visit, Francesca Lunzer Kritz reported in The Washington Post.

“It’s a paradigm shift from what most consumers are used to at their doctor’s office,” says Red Gillen, a San Francisco-based analyst with consulting firm Celent, who last month published a report on doctors seeking upfront payment from their patients. Gillen says that until recently, insurers paid so much of the cost of medical care that medical providers, including doctors, labs and hospitals, focused their fee recovery efforts on the companies. But in the past few years, Gillen says, employers and insurers have shifted more costs to consumers in the form of higher co-pays, higher co-insurance and higher deductibles, making those payments an increasingly large share of doctors’ incomes. According to Gillen, consumer out-of-pocket spending as a percentage of all health-care spending rose to 12 percent last year, and is expected to continue rising.

Patient advocates regard the faster billing process as a positive for consumers, Lunzer Kritz found, but some are concerned that patients are not warned about their doctor’s billing practices and that higher up-front payment demands may discourage sick people from seeking care.

Andrew Van Dam