By John Hargraves and Aaron Bloschichak on Tuesday, 17 December 2019
Category: Briefs

International comparisons of health care prices from the 2017 iFHP survey

The International Federation of Health Plans (iFHPiFHP), a CEO network of the global health insurance industry based in London, in partnership with the Health Care Cost Institute (HCCI) in the United States, and iFHP member companies in eight countries, today published the latest International Comparison of Health Prices Report. The report compares the median prices paid by a sample of private health insurance companies for specific health care services in nine countries. Comparisons across different countries are complicated by differences in sectors, fee schedules, and prices may not be representative of prices paid by other plans in that market. We attempted to minimize these limitations by selecting services with very specific definitions and wording survey questions to match the procedures that are the basis of the US payment system.

The median prices paid by private insurance for health care services in the United States was almost always higher than the median prices in the eight other countries included in the iFHP study. Figure 1 shows the prices paid for medical services in each country as a percent of the US price.

Key Findings:

Figure 2 shows the prices paid for drugs in each country as a percent of the US price. US prescription drug prices are average point-of-sale price, which reflects discounts from the wholesale price, but not manufacturer rebates.

Key Findings:

Figure 3 shows the prices paid for each service in each country in 2017, converted at prevailing 2017 exchange rates to US dollars. Toggle through the four service categories - hospital admissions, physician/outpatient, administered drugs, and prescription drugs – at the top of the figure and select specific services using the buttons on the right.