Report: Health care administrative transactions cost $18B more last year

The U.S. health care system spent $60 billion conducting nine common administrative transactions in 2022, about $18 billion more than the previous year due to higher staffing costs and health care use, according to the latest annual CAQH Index. Fully transitioning to nine HIPAA electronic transaction standards could reduce annual transaction costs by $22.3 billion, the authors estimate.
Related News Articles
Headline
The National Institutes of Health Feb. 7 issued supplemental guidance on updating negotiated indirect cost rates for new and existing NIH grants. The NIH will…
Headline
The net prices of five drugs included in a new study from the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review increased without clinical justification in 2023.…
Headline
The National Academy for State Health Policy’s Hospital Cost Tool “misses the mark in many ways, and its use by payers, purchasers and policymakers could have…
Perspective
There will always be administrative costs associated with operating a hospital. But the lion’s share of a hospital’s resources should be devoted to doing what…
Blog
Last week, several academics released a working paper saying hospital prices lead to employment losses outside the health sector, among other faulty…
Perspective
Hospitals hold an extraordinary place in our society by offering comfort and caring to all who walk through their doors, regardless of ability to pay.While the…