- California to award $111M for behavioral health supportive housing
- ‘It’s no longer a theory. It’s here’: Tampa General’s revenue cycle chief on the age of AI agents
- 6 new psychiatric residency programs to know
- 3 health systems recognized for cybersecurity results
- USOSM adds New York practice
- NAMI partners on health crisis preparation hub
- Sutter Health, NBA’s Kings ink jersey patch deal
- The ’10-5-2′ rule behind Scripps Health’s drop in workplace violence injuries
- CMS proposes nationwide joint replacement payment model
- FDA commissioner is out: 8 things to know
- Oklahoma enacts law expanding access to dental care
- 5 CFO job openings with HCA
- Federal subpoena seeks NYU Langone gender-affirming care records
- 300,000 in limbo as BCBS Michigan, Michigan Medicine clash over reimbursement
- Bon Secours breaks ground on $200M hospital expansion
- Mayo Clinic CEO to step down
- Where dentists are leaving value behind in practice sales
- Why dental practices are closing in 2026
- Texas dental school to launch master’s program with orthodontic specialty
- Ophthalmology MSO receives private equity investment
- Qualitas Dental Partners makes investments into 7 practices
- Spine device company CFO pleads guilty to kickback scheme
- Mayo Clinic CEO Gianrico Farrugia stepping down at year's end
- OrthoCarolina to grow its ASC capacity by 150%
- 988 calls are rising — what’s behind the surge?
- Multidisciplinary GI clinic names new president, COO
- Providence hospital to lay off 40 workers amid behavioral health staffing overhaul
- The specialties ASCs are fighting hardest to recruit
- 600+ ASCs performing total joint replacements | 2026
- How AI can boost independent dentistry
- BioMarin consolidates staff at Amicus HQ after closing $4.8B deal for rare disease peer
- Texas behavioral health operator files for Chapter 11
- 12 hospitals, health systems investing in GI
- US Monitors For Hantavirus As WHO Expects More Cases But 'Not Another COVID'
- MultiCare pilot targets opioid overdoses with 5-day treatment
- Michigan sends 152 youths out of state for mental healthcare: Report
- University of California, union near May 14 strike deadline with no deal in hand
- The key to private practice success in dentistry
- 12 major hospital deals in 1 month
- Aspen Dental opens offices in Texas, Utah
- Tennessee enacts new noncompete restrictions
- The biggest threats to DSO growth in 2026
- 1 in 5 marketplace enrollees dropped their coverage in 2026: media report
- Hims & Hers posts $92M loss in Q1 as it shifts to branded GLP-1 medications
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- FDA Commissioner Marty Makary to resign, capping turbulent tenure: report
- FDA Commissioner Marty Makary to resign, capping turbulent tenure: report
- Providence puts years of losses in rearview with its third consecutive quarter of operating gains
- Millions of Women Suffer in Silence From Treatable Pelvic Organ Prolapse
- Eli Lilly pauses Indian obesity awareness campaign after regulatory notices: report
- Optum Rx unveils new transparent PBM model
- Fitness wearable Whoop adds on-demand clinician access, EHR syncing
- Alkermes’ Lumryz hits phase 3 mark in another sleep disorder, fueling momentum from $2.4B Avadel acquisition
- Bayer's Eylea declines by 24%, bearing the brunt of biosmilar competition
- Pfizer, Arvinas win $85M upfront in Rigel licensing pact for new breast cancer med Veppanu
- As public vaccine criticism quiets, RFK Jr. keeps safety inquiries running in background: NYT
- As public vaccine criticism quiets, RFK Jr. keeps safety inquiries running in background: NYT
- What's Fueling The High U.S. Death Rate? It Might Not Be What You Think
- Telemedicine Not Breaking The Bank, Also Not Expanding Patient Access
- After-School Sports An Overall Boon To Children And Teens, Study Shows
- Trump Promised Cheaper Drugs. Some Prices Dropped. Many Others Shot Up
- Why Are Older Adults Taking Edibles? Survey Reveals Some Surprises
- Low Wages, Empty Plates, Heavy Toll: Rethinking Suicide Prevention
- EU advances scheme to bolster manufacturing autonomy, avert drug shortages
- Bicara Therapeutics hires Replimune, Sanofi alum as chief commercial officer
- Henry Ford Health to receive $12M suicide prevention grant
- The broken pipeline of mental healthcare for LGBTQ teenagers
- Novant hospital’s pediatric behavioral ED stays drop from 6 weeks to 2.11 days
- FDA Launches One-Day Inspectional Assessments to Strengthen and Expand Oversight
- FDA Launches One-Day Inspectional Assessments to Strengthen and Expand Oversight
- Is your hospital ready for a prolonged IT outage? Joint Commission, AHA's new resiliency program will let you know
- FDA Expands AI Capabilities: Launches ELSA and Completes HALO Data Platform Consolidation
- FDA Expands AI Capabilities: Launches ELSA and Completes HALO Data Platform Consolidation
- Roche acquires PathAI to transform AI-driven diagnostics
- Roche acquires PathAI to transform AI-driven diagnostics
- Trump Planning to Fire FDA Commissioner Marty Makary
- Trump Planning to Fire FDA Commissioner Marty Makary
- Included Health launches AI-powered solution to connect members to providers
- FDA Green Lights Bizengri Drug To Treat Rare, Aggressive Bile Duct Cancer
- The Hidden Design Flaw in Medical Device Service Technology
- The Hidden Design Flaw in Medical Device Service Technology
- An Endovascular Approach to Neurological Diseases Can Shift the Treatment Paradigm
- An Endovascular Approach to Neurological Diseases Can Shift the Treatment Paradigm
- 8,500 Steps A Day Could Be Sweet Spot For Preventing Weight Regain
- Why Gen AI is a Win for MedTech: And, How to Unlock its Potential with the Right Policies
- Why Gen AI is a Win for MedTech: And, How to Unlock its Potential with the Right Policies
- Survey: Employers seeking greater transparency from pharmacy benefits
- Kaiser Permanente's investments pick up the slack as Q1 operating margin slims to 2.1%
- AMA unveils policy framework to combat AI deepfake physician impersonation
- The Medical Device Cybersecurity Gap Hiding in Plain Sight
- The Medical Device Cybersecurity Gap Hiding in Plain Sight
- CSL slashes revenue projection and takes $5B impairment as interim CEO flags R&D misses, market erosion
- Healthcare bankruptcies up 33% in Q1 2026: report
- Why Doctors Are Quitting At An Earlier Age
- Sharper Brains May Face Higher Depression Relapse Risk, Study Finds
- Older Adults Have Fewer Regrets, Study Says
- Partner's bispecific Bizengri nabs FDA national priority nod in rare bile duct cancer
- Daiichi Sankyo targets global top 5 oncology rank by 2035, $1.3B efficiency drive in new 5-year plan
- That Discount At The Pharmacy Counter May Pack Hidden Costs
- Nighttime Heat Waves Increase Asthma Risk
- Watch: 8 Health Insurance Terms You Should Know
- As Ranks of Uninsured Grow, Minnesota’s Hospitals Are Among Least Charitable in Nation
- OVID Health hires Edelman alum Davide Scalenghe to boost its international footprint
- Maintaining trust in medical AI: Monitoring and managing model lifecycle
- Maintaining trust in medical AI: Monitoring and managing model lifecycle
- Eli Lilly shoots for health in new Caitlin Clark ad campaign
- Omada Health posts 42% revenue jump in Q1, joins Eli Lilly employer weight loss program
- Journalists Shed Light on Deadly Hantavirus Outbreak and a Crisis in the Nation’s ERs
- The Make America Healthy Again Movement Comes for Hospital Food
- Remarks at the Conference on Financial Market Regulation
- Dad Jokes: Remarks at the 13th Annual Conference on Financial Markets Regulation
- RFK Jr. Launches Plan To Curb Antidepressant 'Overprescription'
- AI-augmented behavioral health provider Theris launches out of stealth
- Skil-Care launches specialized healthcare product innovation program
- As new tech, AI sweeps the marketing world, Eversana Intouch’s new CEO is ‘comfortable in the gray’
- Sanford Health unveils deal to integrate Minnesota-area North Memorial Health, invest $600M
- UPDATED—Trump plans to fire FDA chief Marty Makary: report
- UPDATED—Trump plans to fire FDA chief Marty Makary: report
- Remarks at the Special Competitive Studies Project AI+ Expo
- Lawmakers, former FDA leaders and more rally behind mifepristone as Supreme Court weighs telemedicine access to abortion pill
- Plant-Based Foods May Help Lower Risk of High Blood Pressure
- The ACA exchanges dominated Q1 earnings calls. Here's what payer, health system execs had to say
- Integrated CDO capabilities reduce early development complexity
- Targeted Protein Degradation and Novel Modalities: Getting on the Frontline
- Gilead cranks up Yeztugo first-year sales forecast to $1B on 'unprecedented launch trajectory'
- Workplace safety is a top priority for 93% of healthcare leaders: Axon survey
- Capricor Therapeutics files breach-of-contract lawsuit against US partner NS Pharma
- Daiichi Sankyo takes $610M profit hit linked to ADC manufacturing overbuild
- Super Shoes Might Increase Risk Of Running Injuries, Study Says
- TV, Movies Offer Flawed Depictions Of Autism, Add To Delayed Diagnosis, Study Says
- Opioid OD Survivors Have Triple Rate Of Repeat Overdoses Than Previously Estimated
- A New Medicare Option For Weight Loss Drugs: What Older Americans Should Know
- Exposure Therapy Can Successfully Ease Peanut Allergies
- In California Governor Race, Single-Payer Is a Litmus Test. There’s Still No Way To Pay for It.
- Listen: A Federal Agency Is After Workers’ Health Data, and Critics Are Alarmed
- Cruise Ship Hantavirus Outbreak Kills 3 as WHO Says Risk Is Low
- How policy, reimbursement incentives, could help healthcare address its climate footprint
- Remarks at the 13th Annual Conference on Financial Market Regulation
- New Study Suggests The Brain Can Continue Learning While In An Unconscious State
- Every 1,000 Steps After Surgery Cuts Complication Risk, Study Finds
- Bullying and Politics Fuel Suicide Risk for LGBTQ+ Teens and Young Adults, Survey Finds
- Head Impacts May Disrupt Gut Health Even Without Concussion
- Class of Migraine Drug, CGRP Inhibitors, Has Added Benefit: Reduced Glaucoma Risk
- States Eye Aid to Prop Up Distressed Hospitals Amid Federal Medicaid Cuts
- That Discount at the Pharmacy Counter May Pack Hidden Costs
- Trump Promised Cheaper Drugs. Some Prices Dropped. Many Others Shot Up.
- FDA Authorizes Fruit-Flavored Vapes for Adults
- Edibles + Alcohol Combo Poses Driving Risks Missed by Sobriety Tests
- VR Training Helps Autistic People Navigate Police Encounters
- Weight Loss Surgeries Fall More Than 20% As Patients Turn To GLP-1 Meds, Experts Say
James Nguyen, a health care attorney who has practiced on behalf of hospitals in Ohio, believes the anticompetitive practices of doctors and hospitals - abetted by government - have driven health care costs more so than health insurance company practices. You may not agree with his theses, but you should become familiar with them:
https://thehill.com/opinion/healthcare/5057659-health-insurance-costs-us/
Don’t blame insurers for what doctor and hospital cartels did to US health care
By James Nguyen - December 28, 2024The murder of the UnitedHealthcare CEO has touched off a wave of anger that’s easy to understand. “Deny, delay, depose” comes from the lived experiences of thousands of Americans. But how much does health insurance actually cost us? According to the American Medical Association, it’s just 6 percent of health care spending.
In other words, if insurers were to donate every cent of profit they made, your health care would become just 3 percent cheaper.
Health insurance mostly operates as a pass-through to send premiums to health care providers. That 6 percent cost covers insurers’ profits, staff and other expenses needed to manage themselves. They use nearly all of their trillions of dollars in revenue to pay providers.
There are many reasons why health insurance goes a shorter distance in the U.S. than anywhere else. But we often overlook two key factors: anti-competitive practices by hospitals and a doctor shortage deliberately engineered decades ago.
The first problem is that hospitals in the U.S. do not compete for patients with respect to price.
For decades, until the Trump administration unveiled price transparency rules in 2020, the cost that insurers (usually your employer) and patients paid for their surgeries was secret, never to be disclosed before the bills arrived. Hospitals sued but failed to block the rules. Even today, 34 percent of hospitals continue to break those rules, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. The department has fined hospitals only four times to enforce the rules, and so avoidance of contentious talk on costs remains deeply embedded in health care’s culture.
The bottom line? Patients are unable to choose a provider that won’t bankrupt their families. Even insurers are unable to effectively negotiate with providers: One private insurer may pay 10 times more than another for the same MRI. On average, private health insurers pay 254 percent more than Medicare to cover their patients.
This is if patients are even fortunate enough to have more than one choice. Nearly half of all metro areas in the U.S. have just one or two hospitals (i.e., a monopoly or duopoly) for inpatient care. From 2000 to 2020, major health systems made 1,164 mergers, only 13 of which have been challenged by the Federal Trade Commission, despite raising prices for patients, insurers and employers.
Our second major problem is an artificial doctor shortage. America needs more health care workers. Hospital lobbyists have sounded the alarm on a shortage of 100,000 health care workers by 2028, even though the average physician made $405,000 annually in 2017 during their peak earning years. How did we get here?
Throughout the late 20th century, again and again, the American Medical Association, the doctors’ lobby, claimed that the U.S was “on the verge of a serious oversupply of physicians.” They demanded in 1997 that the U.S. train fewer physicians (as many as 20 percent fewer), and so training jobs for medical school graduates declined or remained flat from 1970 to 2010 even though medical students became more competitive and far more qualified.
This is worth reiterating: There are more qualified medical students willing to become physicians than ever. But the American Medical Association asked our government to stop training them by fiat, like a cartel.
When asked about whether the American Medical Association demanded these changes to protect physician incomes, one of its trustees said, “That is not the agenda of this initiative. It is socially irresponsible to invest large sums in training doctors who are unlikely to find jobs practicing medicine after their training.”
Only experienced Canadian doctors are consistently permitted to practice in the U.S. without going through years-long residencies with grueling 60-80 hour work weeks. Doctors with decades of experience in countries with high-performing health systems, including the Netherlands and Australia, are not.
As a result, two seemingly contradictory things are true: We have fewer physicians per capita than most wealthy countries, even though physicians in the U.S. are paid more than anywhere else, at twice as much as in Europe, even after accounting for how much Americans earn.
This is not a criticism of how much physicians get paid. But paying physicians more only reduces their attrition rate. That does not go very far if we aren’t training more physicians to replace those who inevitably retire and to treat more patients.
America’s response to the doctor shortage has been slow. A few states first began loosening restrictions on immigrant doctors practicing in the U.S. without residency in 2023. And while the U.S. expanded training slots for doctors in 2017, federal 2023 legislation to further expand residencies remains stuck in committee. Meanwhile, understaffed hospitals have burned out so many physicians, despite their pay, that the AMA has reversed its position by asking the government to train more doctors.
Republicans and Democrats have plenty of interesting policy choices coming from think tanks, whether that’s incremental changes transitioning from fee-for-service to value-based health care or more radical single-payer health care. They are out of the scope of this piece.
But this much is clear: Simply siphoning taxpayer or insurer money to inflate wages will not alone solve our health care woes. Costs will not come down unless we enforce price transparency and antitrust rules on hospitals undermining competition. We cannot protect patients’ health unless we have more doctors; accelerating states’ loosening of doctor residency rules and passing the Resident Physician Shortage Reduction Act will save lives. Enforcing competition and increasing supply are two pillars essential to any plan to save America’s healthcare system.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.















