Trump Pushes Hospitals to Be More Transparent with Executive Order

Politics

In a move that might help push down some of the costs of healthcare, President Trump signed a new executive order yesterday afternoon. In it, he called for hospitals and doctor offices to be more transparent about their prices. The goal is to give patients the opportunity to shop around. If they can compare prices, it might impact where they go to receive care.

Allowing for consumers to shop around, in turn, drives down the market cost. Currently, if you needed an emergency room visit, the costs are hidden from view. You don’t know what you’re getting into until later when you receive the crazy bill. This gives hospitals a marketing advantage as they don’t feel the need to compete with other hospitals. Now they do, which will ultimately help to drive down costs.

“Hospitals will be required to publish prices that reflect what people pay for services,” said President Trump at a White House event. “You will get great pricing. Prices will come down by numbers that you wouldn’t believe. The cost of healthcare will go way, way down.”

Giving Patients Control

Businessman-turned-president understands a thing or two about competition and how to drive down costs. Yet, this executive order doesn’t tell the hospitals how it should be done. In fact, it simply directs the Department of Health and Human Services to start putting together a new policy that hospitals will later be forced to follow.

“The president knows the best way to lower costs in health care is to put patients in control by increasing choice and competition,” HHS Secretary Alex Azar said at a phone briefing for reporters Monday morning. The new rule should also “require health care providers and insurers to provide patients with information about the out-of-pocket costs they’ll face before they receive health care services,” he added.

“Today patients don’t have access to prices or choices or even ability to see quality,” said Cynthia Fisher, founder of a group called Patient Rights Advocate. “I think the exciting part of this executive order is the President and administration are really moving to put the patient in the driver’s seat and be empowered for the first time with knowledge and information.”

New Rules to Be Determined

Again, it’s unknown what rules will be written in this regard, but it’s expected to help drive down costs in five unique ways. Those ways haven’t been revealed yet, but it’s the most comprehensive package designed to lower healthcare costs, much to the frustration of the healthcare industry as a whole.

In fact, the healthcare industry is saying these changes will have the opposite effect and push prices higher.

“Publicly disclosing competitively negotiated, proprietary rates will reduce competition and push prices higher — not lower — for consumers, patients, and taxpayers,” said Matt Eyles, CEO of America’s Health Insurance Plans in a statement. He says it will perpetuate “the old days of the American health care system paying for volume over value. We know that is a formula for higher costs and worse care for everyone.”

“I’m skeptical that disclosure of health care prices will drive prices down, and could even increase prices once hospitals and doctors know what their competitors down the street are getting paid,” said Larry Levitt, senior vice president for health reform the Kaiser Family Foundation, in a tweet. 

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Trump Sends Economic Team to China to Avert Impending Trade War

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After President Donald Trump announced he would place tariffs on steel and aluminum to spur on growth in the American markets, several countries freaked out and promised to retaliate with tariffs of their own.

Wall Street reacted accordingly as stocks dropped over 700 points in a single day to the news that the U.S. may soon be embroiled in a trade war.

The main concern has to do with the world’s two largest economies battling it out for supremacy, which would almost certainly leave other countries destabilized and fighting for air.

While the idea of a trade war is unsettling, there’s a chance that Trump isn’t too serious about keeping tariffs up for long. Instead, he might be pushing for better negotiations on a trade deal he’s touted since the campaign trail.

It’s a tactic that has proven to work so far.

All one has to do is look at the North Korea situation. Trump’s aggressive tone had many fearing that WW3 was about to break out any moment, but instead, it brought both sides to the negotiating table. For the first time in over 60 years, the Korean War has officially ended.

In an effort to avoid a trade war with China, a war the U.S. can’t afford to have as its economy recovers from a decade-long recession, Trump has sent a team of experts to Beijing with the goal of leaving with a compromise deal that helps both sides.

Trump tweeted last week that he believes a deal will get done, but some aren’t as optimistic. His team needs to be united on the tenants of the deal to make negotiations simpler, but those he did send don’t seem to be likeminded about what needs to get done. It consists of both free trade advocates as well as trade hawks…two sides who rarely agree on anything.

Chris Krueger, the managing director of the Cowen Washington Research Group, isn’t optimistic about the deal.

“This sets up a bizarre situation where the US team may spend most of the talks negotiating among themselves. It’s hard to picture more unique Trump officials.”

Trump himself believes sending a team with diverse ideas is a great thing, but one is left to wonder, with a recovering economy, if now is not the time to leave it to chance. This is the best chance we have at preventing a trade war, so sending a team that isn’t in agreement won’t be likely to solve the problem.

At the end of the day, a trade war can send the American economy back into a recession and destroy the massive positive movement we’ve seen under the Trump administration so far.

Hopefully the president’s aggressive tactics don’t lead us down that road.

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