HASC describes how billions wasted on administration of healthcare
WASHINGTON, D.C., July 20, 2009 – The nation could save billions of dollars each year in the healthcare system by addressing certain areas of administrative complexity, according to a report released today by the Healthcare Administrative Simplification Coalition (HASC), a public/private partnership of organizations committed to reducing the administrative costs and complexity of healthcare. The report, "Bringing Better Value: Recommendations to Address the Costs and Causes of Administrative Complexity in the Nation’s Healthcare System," estimates that reducing administrative costs by just 10 percent could save as much as $500 billion over 10 years.
"Efforts to reform the financing, delivery and reach of health insurance must include a vigorous assault on the unnecessary and unproductive complexity in healthcare," says Linda Kloss, American Health Information Management Association Chief Executive Officer.
HASC estimates that as much as a quarter of U.S. healthcare spending goes to administrative functions, not patient-centered services. Much of that administrative activity is duplicative, and little of it has been standardized. While some administrative activity is needed to manage a healthcare system, the current levels of complexity divert too much time and money from clinical care to administrative processes.
"Every dollar spent on a convoluted, redundant or unnecessary administrative process is a dollar poorly spent," says William F. Jessee, MD, FACMPE, president and CEO of the Medical Group Management Association, a founding HASC member. "We spend more on healthcare than any nation in the world, but we're getting far less than full value for our investment, partly because of unnecessarily complex administrative processes."
The coalition of physician and hospital organizations, health and benefits plans, employers, government agencies, and other groups called for voluntary and nationally coordinated changes to reduce red tape in a wide range of administrative processes related to healthcare billing and payment.
"The overwhelming number and complexity of processes in healthcare administration today are adding little or no value to patient care, safety or cost control and, worse, they are costing our nation money and time we cannot spare," says Doug Henley, MD, FAAFP, Executive Vice President, AAFP.
In the report issued today, HASC outlines a plan for physician practices, hospitals, insurance payers, benefits managers and others to voluntarily adopt a coordinated nationwide approach to conducting key administrative processes for:
HASC is a coalition that includes some of the nation’s leading physician and hospital organizations, health and benefits plans, employers, government agencies, and other groups that share the goals of simplifying administrative processes in the nation's public and private healthcare financing programs. The coalition was founded by the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) and the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA).
HASC members determine positions of the coalition, such as those presented in the report, by majority vote. Therefore, HASC position may not fully represent the position of each coalition member.
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About HASC
The Healthcare Administrative Simplification Coalition was organized by the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) and the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA). It is committed to reducing the administrative costs and complexity of health care. Other members of the coalition include the nation's leading physician and hospital organizations, health and benefits plans, employers, government agencies and other groups sharing the coalition's goals.
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