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2012 Colonoscopy through stoma- with biopsy, single or multiple, Facility

Health Care Cost Calculation View

Health Care Costs Calculator

Introduction
This calculator calculates the health care cost of inputs based on insurance provider, health care provider, and health care recipient costs. It also calculates a qualitative rating of health care inputs.

Calculation View Description
This procedure took place several years ago and bills could not be found verifying the costs. It is strictly being used to test new health care calculators. Domain specific example.v171

Version: 0.8.1

Feedback About ruraldelivery/input/2012 Colonoscopy through stoma- with biopsy, single or multiple, Facility/2147389493/none

Step 1 of 5. Make Selections

Relations

Use In Descendants?
Overwrite Descendants?

Step 2 of 5. Make Selections

Health Care Input Is In Network?

Optional Additional Costs (Opportunity Costs)

Add Additional Prices To Base Input Price?

Step 3 of 5. Input Quality Rating

Input Quality of Health Care Rating.

Only complete this step for the primary inputs or services used for your health care condition.

Using a scale of 0 to 10, rate the quality of this input or service. 0 = not applicable or don't know. Ratings can be whole numbers, such as 10, or single digits, such as 5.5.

Are you willing to participate in a more comprehensive survey about the benefits and costs of your health care?

Survey Participation.

Step 4 of 5. Calculate

Costs

Cost Rating: 67.857
Recipient Cost (=input.OCPrice): 500.000
Incentives Cost: 0.000
Insurance Provider Cost: 350.000
Adjusted Cost: 248.580
Health Care Provider Cost: 500.000
Additional Cost (Add. Cost 1 plus 2): 675.000
Additional Cost 1: 675.000
Additional Cost 2: 0.000
124.290

Step 5 of 5. Save

Method 1. Do you wish to save these calculations? These calculations are viewed by opening this particular calculator addin.



Instructions (beta)

Step 1

  • Step 1. Use Same Calculator Pack In Descendants?: True to insert or update this same calculator in children.
  • Step 1. Overwrite Descendants?: True to insert or update all of the attributes of this same calculator in all children. False only updates children attributes that are controlled by the developer of this calculator (i.e. version, stylesheet name, relatedcalculatorstype ...)
  • Step 1. What If Tag Name: Instructional videos explaining the use of what-if scenario calculations should be viewed before changing or using this parameter.
  • Step 1. Related Calculators Type: When the Use Same Calculator Pack in Descendant is true, uses this value to determine which descendant calculator to update. Inserts a new descendant when no descendant has this same name. Updates the descendant that has this same name.
  • Step 1. Real and Nominal Rates: The nominal rate includes inflation while the real rate does not. Note that when this input is added to a budget, the rates chosen in the budget calculator or analyzer can override this rate. In the USA, DevTreks recommends using Office of Management and Budget rates for the same year as the date of the input.
  • Cost Perspective: Some economists believe that the 'ideal' entity completing the cost estimate is a 'perfect' insurance provider who acts as a 'perfect' agent for the recipient (who pays out all payments collected as benefits and is not motivated by making profits). In practice, the perspective (and price type below) can be chosen based on the requirements of the economic evaluation. Costs and Benefits should use the same perspective.
  • Before Treatment Comparator: Many health care organizations recommend using 'routine care' as the 'before treatment' comparator. In practice, the comparator can be chosen based on the requirements of the economic evaluation. Please try to keep the comparators consistent within a network.

Step 2

  • Step 2. Step 3 should only be completed for the primary inputs or services affecting your health care condition.
  • Step 2. Health Care Provider: Name of the individual or organization providing the health care input.
  • Step 2. Insurance Provider: Name of the company or organization providing health care insurance for the input.
  • Step 2. Package Type: Type of package received in insurance plan. Examples include high-family, low-self ...
  • Step 2. Postal Code: Zip, or postal, code of the health care provider.
  • Step 2. Is In Network Option: If false, adds together two costs to calculate Recipient Costs. The first cost is computed the same as the 'In Network' cost (see Example 1 or 2 below). The second cost is the difference between the adjusted price and the 'price type to use' price (see Example 3 below)
  • Step 2. Severity of Condition: The severity of the main health care condition resulting in the use of this input or service plays an important part in the cost of health care received. Choose one of the severity options. If needed, ask a medical professional for their opinion.
  • Step 2. Add Additional Prices to Input?: Yes means add both additional costs (price x amount) to the Recipient Cost (the Recipient Cost becomes the base input.OCPrice).
  • Step 2. Additional Prices: Unit costs for additional costs incurred in the use of the input such as productivity loss, informal care, travel expenses, new clothes, new furniture, etc.
  • Step 2. Additional Price Description: Explanation for how the additional prices and amounts were calculated.

Step 3

  • Step 3. Ratings: Ratings can be 0 to 10, with decimals, such as 7.5 acceptable. Use a 0 rating when the rating is not known or not applicable.
  • Step 3. Diagnosis Quality Rating: Rate how well the provider used this input or service to diagnose your heath care condition.
  • Step 3. Treatment Quality Rating: Rate how well the provider used this input or service to treat your heath care condition
  • Step 3. Treatment Benefit Rating: Rate how much this input or service contributed to the resolution of your health care condition
  • Step 3. Treatment Cost Rating: Rate whether or not the costs of this input or service justified the benefits.
  • Step 3. Knowledge Transfer Rating: Rate how much information you received about the need for this input or service and its efficacy.
  • Step 3. Constrained Choice Rating: Rate the degree to which you would have chosen to use this input, service, and/or provider, if no constraints were faced when making the decision.
  • Step 3. Insurance Coverage Rating: Requires dividing the percentage of the cost of this input paid by the insurance company by 10 (6.5 = 65% / 10).
  • Step 3. Will Do Survey: True means that you are willing to complete a more comprensive survey about the benefits and costs of health care.
  • Step 3. Input Quality Assessment: Provide an explanation for the ratings made above.

Step 4

  • Step 4. Price Type To Use: The price type can be chosen based on the requirements of the economic evaluation (see 'Cost Perspective', above) . Efforts should be made to collect enough data to calculate sound recipient costs, insurance provider costs, and health care provider costs. Efforts should also be made to ensure that all of the clubs found in a DevTreks network follow the same price collection strategy.
  • Step 4. Base Price: 'Base Price' is the health care input price used by health care providers as an initial, benchmark, price for calculating the full costs of health care inputs. Many organizations use Medicare prices, or usual and customary rates (UCRs), as the base price. This calculator uses the input's CAP Price as the 'Base Price'.
  • Step 4. Contracted Price: The 'Contracted Price' is the health care input price negotiated by insurance companies, or governments, with health care providers.
  • Step 4. Base Price Adjustment and Adjusted Price: The 'Adjusted Price' is calculated by multiplying the 'Base Price' by the 'Base Price Adjustment'. The Base Price Adjustment usually ranges from 140 to 250 percent of the base price. Adjusted Prices are often used as 'Out of Network' price. Example: $1300 Adjusted Price = $1000 Base Price * 130% (Base Price Adjustment / 100). This number is divided by 100 in the Adjusted Price calculation. The Adjusted Price derived using this multiplier is considered the full 'market' price for this input.
  • Step 4. List Price : The List Price is the Health Care Provider's full input price.
  • Step 4. Market Price: The Market Price is the Health Care Provider's discounted List price.
  • Step 4. Production Cost Price: The Production Cost Price is the Health Care Provider's cost of production for this input. This price is seldom available (but can be readily calculated using DevTreks) but closely matches the economics science definition of costs.
  • Step 4. Annual Premium Paid By Recipient: Annual amount of money spent on health care insurance by the health care recipient.
  • Step 4. Annual Premium Paid By Other: Annual amount of money spent on health care insurance on behalf of health care recipients by employers or governments.
  • Step 4. Annual Premiums Assigned to this Input: Amount of both annual premiums to assign to this specific input. Generally will be equal to what the insurance company pays, but the amount should not exceed the summation of both premiums. The final recipient cost will include this amount.
  • Step 4. CoPayment Amounts: Lump sum payments made by health care recipients to receive this health care input. Deductibles should be included as copayments.
  • Step 4. CoPayment Rates: Payment rates, calculated as percentage of health care input costs, paid by health care recipients. For example, a value of 30 for an input with a price of $100 would mean that a $30 ($100 * 30%) payment was needed. Don't enter the character '%' and don't enter a number less than one unless the rate is really a fraction less than one.
  • Step 4. Incentive Amounts: Lump sum incentives, or subsidies, received by health care recipients to receive this health care input. For example, some low income recipients may receive subsidy payments to help pay the cost of the input.
  • Step 4. Incentive Rates: Subsidy rates, calculated as percentage of health care input costs, received by health care recipients to reduce the cost of this health care input. For example, some recipients may receive incentives based on an assesment of their risk in needing this input. Don't enter the character '%' and don't enter a number less than one unless the rate is really a fraction less than one.
  • Step 4. Insurance Provider Price ProRates: When the insurance provider lumps inputs together when calculating their prices (i.e. a colonoscopy input service with a sedation iput service), each input's insurance company prices (copays, contracted price) should be prorated among the inputs. The prorate formula could be based on the combined inputs' total costs (input1 prorate = inputs total cost / input1price). Alternatively, an operation health care cost calculator can be used instead of an input cost calculator to set the insurance company costs.
  • Step 4. Description: Explanation for the prices, copayments and incentives.
  • Step 4. Input Quality Rating: Sum of step 2's ratings multiplied by 10 and divided by the number of nonzero ratings. Ratings of 0 are left out of the calculation. The scientific significance of this rating system has not been established yet, but recent research suggests that rating the quality of health care received, and health care management, plays an important role in achieving health care efficiency.
  • Step 4. Recipient Cost: Cost paid by the health care recipient for using this input. The calculation does not include incentives. This price is used to set the associated input.OCPrice. The formula is: Recipient Cost = FeeToUse - InsuranceProviderCost - IncentivesCost + AssignedPremiumCost + (AdditionalCost, if useinanlaysis = true). Note that copays and incentives can be set to zero to cause this cost to be any of the price types. For example, a cost analysis that preferred using cost of production prices would choose a 'Price To Use Type' of 'Production Cost' and set all of the copays to zero. We recommend that economic analyses use uniform 'Price To Use Types' for all of the inputs used in an economic analysis.
  • Step 4. Incentives Cost: Incentives paid on behalf of the health care recipient, usually by governments, for using this input.
  • Step 4. Insurance Provider Cost: Cost paid by the insurance provider for the health care recipient's use of this input. The formula is: InsuranceProviderCost = ContractedPrice - CoPay1Amount - CoPay2Amount- (ContractedPrice * CoPay1Rate) - (ContractedPrice * CoPay2Rate);
  • Step 4. Health Care Provider Cost: Cost paid to the health care provider for the health care recipient's use of this input. The formula is: HealthCareProviderCost = InsuranceProviderCost + ReceiverCost - AssignedPremiumCost
  • Step 4. Additional Costs: Additional costs associated with the use of this input or service, often incurred by the health care recipient (i.e. productivity loss, informal care) .

Examples

  • Example 1. Typical Insurance Recipient Who Pays a CoPayment Amount In Network: Base Price (Medicare-derived price) = $1000; Price To Use = Contract Price; Contract Price = $1000; CoPayment Amount 1 = $100; Recipient Cost = $100; Insurance Provider Cost = $900 = $1000 (Contracted Price) - $100 (Recipient Cost).
  • Example 2. Typical Insurance Recipient Who Pays a CoPayment Rate In Network: Base Price (Medicare-derived price) = $1000; Price To Use = Contract Price; Contract Price = $1000; CoPayment Rate 1 = 10; Recipient Cost = $100 = $1000 (Contracted Price) * 10% (CoPayment Rate 1); Insurance Provider Cost = $900 = $1000 (Contracted Price) - $100 (Recipient Cost).
  • Example 3. Typical Insurance Recipient Who Pays for an Out Of Network Service at List Price: Price To Use = List Price ($1000); Contract Price = $700; CoPayment Amount 1 = $100; Insurance Provider Cost = $600 = $700 (Contracted Price) - $100 (CoPayment). Additional Recipient Cost = $300 = $1000 (List Price) - $700 (Contracted Price). Recipient Full Cost = $400 = $100 (CoPayment Amount 1) + $300 (Additional Recipient Cost)

References

  • This calculator needs vetting in the field before it can be used to provide full decision support.
  • Access Economics. An improved HTA economic evaluation framework for Australia. A (report for the) Medical Technology Association of Australia. May, 2009.
  • Ernst R. Berndt, David M. Cutler, Richard G. Frank, Zvi Griliches, Joseph P. Newhouse, and Jack E. Triplett. Price Indexes for Medical Care Good and Services: An Overview of Measurement Issues. NBER Working Paper No. 6817. JEL No. 11, C8. November, 1998.
  • Alan M. Garber. Advances in Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Health Interventions. Working Paper 7198. National Bureau of Economic Research. June 1999.
  • New York Times. Insurers Alter Cost Formula. Patients Pay. April 24, 2012
  • National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE, England). Guide to the methods of technology appraisal. June, 2008.
  • National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE, England). Briefing papers for the update to the Methods Guide (2008 Technology Appraisals Methods Guide), January, 2012
  • Smith MW, Barnett PG, Phibbs CS, Wagner TH. Microcost methods of determining VA (Veterans Administration) healthcare costs. Menlo Park, CA: Health Economics Resource Center. 2010.
  • Zsolt Magyorosy, Peter Smith. The main methodological issues in costing medical health care services. A literature review. Center for Health Economics, University of York, CHE Research Paper 7. 2005.

Current view of document
DevTreks -social budgeting that improves lives and livelihoods
Input Group
Endoscopy - colonoscopy
Input
2012 Colonoscopy through stoma- with biopsy, single or multiple, Facility
Health Care Provider Insurance Provider Package Type Diagnosis Quality Rating Treatment Quality Rating Treatment Benefit Rating Treatment Cost Rating Knowledge Transfer Rating Constrained Choice Rating Insurance Coverage Rating
Cost Rating Severity of Condition Is In Network Price Type Receiver Cost Incentives Cost Insurance Provider Cost Health Care Provider Cost Additional Cost Use Added Costs In Input
Base Price Base Price Adjustment Adjusted Price Contracted Price List Price Market Price Production Cost Price Annual Premium Self Annual Premium Other Assigned Premium Cost
Additional Cost Name 1 Additional Price 1 Additional Amount 1 Additional Unit 1 Additional Cost 1 Additional Cost Name 2 Additional Price 2 Additional Amount 2 Additional Unit 2 Additional Cost 2
CoPay 1 Amount CoPay 2 Amount CoPay 1 Rate CoPay 2 Rate Incentive 1 Amount Incentive 2 Amount Incentive 1 Rate Incentive 2 Rate
Wisconsin General Blue Cross and Blue Shield high self 7.50 9.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 9.00 7.00
67.857 notsevere 1 contractedprice 500.000 0.000 350.000 500.000 675.000 0
124.290 200.000 248.580 500.000 1000.000 600.000 300.000 3000.000 4200.000 350.000
Opp Cost Work 75.000 9.000 hours 675.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
150.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
Input Quality Assessment : Domain specific example v171
Additional Costs Description : Opportunity cost of time spent aways from work. v171a
Input Series: 2012 Colonoscopy through stoma- with biopsy, single or multiple, Facility
Wisconsin General Blue Cross and Blue Shield high self 7.50 9.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 9.00 7.00
67.857 notsevere 1 contractedprice 500.000 0.000 350.000 500.000 675.000 0
124.290 200.000 248.580 500.000 1000.000 600.000 300.000 3000.000 4200.000 350.000
Opp Cost Work 75.000 9.000 hours 675.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
150.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
Input Quality Assessment : Domain specific example v171
Additional Costs Description : Opportunity cost of time spent aways from work. v171a
Dataset: 2012 Colonoscopy through stoma- with biopsy, single or multiple, Facility IRI See CPT copyright information and price reference from parent input group and service.









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