Price Transparency

Hospitals and health systems are committed to empowering patients and their families with all the information they need to live their healthiest lives. This includes ensuring they have access to accurate and timely price information when seeking care. Hospitals and health systems have made important progress in adopting federal price transparency requirements that require they both publicly post machine-readable files of a wide range of rate information and provide more consumer-friendly displays of pricing information for at least 300 shoppable services.

This podcast focuses on new resources the AHA created to help hospitals and health systems in offering out-of-pocket cost estimates to patients in advance of receiving medical care.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services will host a Dec. 8 webinar on its final rule requiring hospitals to disclose payer-specific negotiated rates effective Jan. 1.
In this podcast from AHA’s The Value Initiative, UCHealth in Aurora, Colo., shares how it uses digital tools to give patients an individualized out-pocket cost estimate.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ hospital price transparency final rule is effective Jan. 1, 2021. This rule, among other things, requires hospitals to disclose their privately negotiated rates with health insurers, discounted cash prices and gross charges.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ hospital price transparency final rule is effective Jan. 1, 2021. This rule, among other things, requires hospitals to disclose their privately negotiated rates with health insurers, discounted cash prices and gross charges.
Issue The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS) hospital price transparency final rule, issued Nov. 14, 2019, will require hospitals to provide an out-of-pocket price estimator tool or information on 300 “shoppable” services for patients as well as disclose their privately…
The Departments of Health and Human Services, Treasury and Labor today released a final rule imposing new transparency requirements on non-grandfathered group health plans and issuers of non-grandfathered health insurance coverage in the individual and group markets.