Insured Americans are using fewer medical services, raising questions about whether patients are consuming less health care as they pick up a greater share of the costs…
Others say that consumers are beginning to forgo elective procedures like knee replacements. “We have a very weak economy and it’s just a different environment for the elective parts of health care,” said Paul Ginsburg, a health economist who runs the Center for Studying Health System Change and has been analyzing health-company earnings. But “this could go beyond the recession. Being a less aggressive consumer of health care is here to stay.”…
To be sure, the change in behavior could be short-lived. On an earnings call last week in which it reported a decline in hospital usage, UnitedHealth Group Inc. said it thought utilization would rise again in the second part of the year, as Americans exhaust their deductibles and insurers start paying for services. Both Aetna Inc. and WellPoint said the utilization fall-off was new as of this year, and they had not seen the trend previously even as the economy has deteriorated. Some insurers also cited an unusually mild flu season this year as a temporary factor.
Join the conversation as a VIP Member