Florida Gov. Rick Scott has made health-care cost transparency a priority this year, and a Northeast Florida lawmaker is sponsoring a version of Scotts vision.
Sen. Rob Bradley (R-Fleming Island) has filed a bill would make average prices for common hospital procedures easily accessible to patients.
On Friday, James Riley anxiously waited for his wife to get out of surgery inside St. Vincents hospital in Jacksonville.
They don’t tell you whats what up front. Like my wife, shes having surgery, but I don’t even know what the price is going to be you know, my co-payment I don’t know yet, he said.
Riley himself recently underwent surgery for cataracts. He says he didnt learn he had a $350 co-pay until he arrived to go under the knife. Had he known, he says he wouldve been more financially prepared.
Its situations like Riley’s that Sen. Rob Bradley (R-Fleming Island) says his bill aims to avoid.
People purchase health care, but they often don’t know what theyre paying for it, and they have really no way to compare prices between different providers, Bradley says. So it really isn’t a true market-based system.
Under his bill, the state would create a claims database, a website using hospital pricing data, to inform patients about the average cost of common procedures.
It would also mandate hospitals give patients an itemized list of estimated costs upon request. If a hospital fails to do so, theyd be fined.
Florida Hospital Association President Bruce Rueben says he supports all of that in principle, but hes vehemently opposed to a provision in Bradleys bill penalizing a provider with at least a $2,500 fine if a procedures cost far exceeds the average price listed in the state database.
There isn’t anything about the government getting involved in setting rates that would be helpful or productive, he says.
Rueben says the hospital association is more supportive of the House version of Bradleys bill, filed by Rep. Chris Sprowls (R-Palm Harbor). If passed, Sprowlss bill would have the same transparency requirements, but wouldnt levy penalties against providers if their prices exceed posted averages.
Bradley wouldn’t say whether hed be willing to nix his penalty provision to match the House version.
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