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Study exaimines out-of-pocket costs for Covid-19 hospitalizations, even with waivers
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![](https://cdn.jamanetwork.com/ama/content_public/journal/jamanetworkopen/938778/zoi210867t1_1633624155.9197.png?Expires=2147483647&Signature=HSt18on0PM-i0jP7GsMXgIicKR96qnssNMqGdBTSfYlcfBbcPKzXuEWCIXoRBBijgZJca7mw9-bDDIOQdk7UyvD9QO2RClQZr5YJaHzP-LA2BB01By8LdIz4X9EPL0MVxYYtfNNnEx~DB~ZK~JMj7M0I1VLDZgW6djwrkWJcYNkA5a12ABTQNEvC7-Mpab5jnUBgGlFlFlYV3gNpYfg2xxOczBNRtuJm3ilCzmgy2cy82JxXgIT7QT114It4OBkCdHaeBDOUa6ORIFfj8HLs6qN2lMQ-1TxFt1rLuoWZCaECq1q7He6LgTGjac-xTtsOoFxWqR~muuJsT3cAm5d45g__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAIE5G5CRDK6RD3PGA)
Key Points
Question How much were patients billed for COVID-19 hospitalizations in the US in 2020?
Findings In this cross-sectional study of 4075 COVID-19 hospitalizations in 2020, 71.2% of privately insured patients and 49.1% of Medicare Advantage patients had cost sharing for any hospitalization-related service, including those billed by clinicians; 4.6% of privately insured and 1.3% of Medicare Advantage had cost sharing for facility services billed by hospitals, with mean out-of-pocket spending of $3840 and $1536, respectively.
Meaning The findings suggest that out-of-pocket spending for COVID-19 hospitalizations may be substantial if insurers allow cost-sharing waivers to expire.
Conclusions and Relevance In this cross-sectional study, few patients hospitalized for COVID-19 in 2020 were billed for facility services provided by hospitals, suggesting that most were covered by insurers with cost-sharing waivers. However, many patients were billed for professional and ancillary services, suggesting that insurer cost-sharing waivers may not have covered all hospitalization-related care. High cost sharing for patients who were billed by facility services suggests that out-of-pocket spending may be substantial for patients whose insurers have allowed waivers to expire. ...
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