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The inefficient effects of non-clinical factors on health care costs.

Shawn McFarlandJonathan Miller
Published in: Health economics, policy, and law (2024)
We use Benford's law to examine the non-random elements of health care costs. We find that as health care expenditures increase, the conformity to the expected distribution of naturally occurring numbers worsens, indicating a tendency towards inefficient treatment. Government insurers follow Benford's law better than private insurers indicating more efficient treatment. Surprisingly, self-insured patients suffer the most from non-clinical cost factors. We suggest that cost saving efforts to reduce non-clinical expenses should be focused on more severe, costly encounters. Doing so focuses cost reduction efforts on less than 10% of encounters that constitute over 70% of dollars spent on health care treatment.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • health insurance
  • newly diagnosed
  • quality improvement
  • social media
  • early onset