key: cord-317440-898r34h2 authors: Meiselbach, Mark K.; Bai, Ge; Anderson, Gerard F. title: Charges of COVID-19 Diagnostic Testing and Antibody Testing Across Facility Types and States date: 2020-09-15 journal: J Gen Intern Med DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-06198-y sha: doc_id: 317440 cord_uid: 898r34h2 nan The high charges for COVID-19 testing by some healthcare providers have received broad media and public attention. 1 Individual providers determine their own charge, which does not vary with insurance type. 2, 3 The charges for COVID-19 testing have important implications for out-of-network plans, uninsured patients, and other payers with little negotiating power. The CARES Act requires that private plans that do not have a negotiated rate with the provider pay the price publicly listed by the provider for COVID-19 testing, which is usually the same as or a percentage of the charge. 4 , 5 Providers that have tested uninsured patients can choose to either seek reimbursement from the Department of Health and Human Services or bill uninsured patients at a self-determined price, which equals the charge unless the provider offers a discount. Therefore, the higher the charge for COVID-19 testing, the higher the potential cost exposure of plans without negotiating power and of uninsured patients. Nationwide COVID-19 testing charges across facility types remain unexplored. In this study, we aim to examine the charges for the most commonly performed COVID-19 diagnostic test (CPT code: 87635) and antibody test (CPT code: 86769) across facility types and states. We obtained administrative claims data for COVID-19 testing from the COVID-19 Research Database, a pro bono cross-industry collaborative. 6 The sample consisted of 182,149 claims of diagnostic testing (CPT code: 87635, Medicare rate $51.31) from 2324 providers in 50 states and DC, and 318,546 claims of antibody testing (CPT code: 86769, Medicare rate $42.13) from 764 providers in 46 states and DC. All claims were submitted between March 19 and July 19, 2020. We obtained the state-level diagnostic testing rate, infection rate, and mortality rate, as of July 20, 2020, from the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center. For each test and facility type, we calculated the average charge (total charges divided by total claims and compared across facility types). For each test and state (with more than ten claims), we calculated the average charge and grouped the states into low, medium, and high tertiles. We analyzed the correlation between each state's average testing charge and its COVID-19 testing rate (available only for diagnostic testing), infection rate, and mortality rate to understand whether the testing charges were influenced by the demand for the test. For COVID-19 diagnostic testing, the mean, median, and standard deviations of charges were $144.06, $100.00 (IQR $67.00-$155.00), and $162.18. The most common facility type was independent laboratories (performed 49.7% of all tests), with an average charge of $140.41 (range $0.01-$14,750.00, IQR $67.00-$100.00), followed by hospital outpatient settings (performed 34.5% of all tests), with an average charge of $168.87 (range $0.01-$2436.00, IQR $94.00-$204.00) (Fig. 1, panel a) . For antibody testing, the mean, median, and standard deviations of charges w ere $63.93, $55.00 (IQR $42.13-$55.00), and $48.92. Independent laboratories performed 97.2% of all tests, with an average charge of $62.30 (range $4.37-$1515.00; IQR $42.13-$55.00) (Fig. 1, (Fig. 2) . No statistically significant association (P < 0.05) was found between testing charges and state-level testing rates, infection rates, or mortality rates. A small proportion of COVID-19 diagnostic testing and antibody testing services, provided in selected states, had charges that far exceeded the Medicare rate. High charges may create financial barriers for some uninsured patients and lead to higher premiums for out-of-network private plans. The results, based on a proportion of all testing claims in the USA, might underestimate the national variation of COVID-19 testing charges. The insurance and network status of each claim and the actual prices paid were unavailable. Other facilities include ambulatory surgical center, ESRD treatment center, federally qualified health center, public health clinic, rural health clinic, skilled nursing facility, telehealth, tribal free-standing clinic, urgent care facility, walk-in retail health clinic, hospital emergency room, and unspecified settings. The data include 165 independent laboratories, 325 hospital outpatient settings, 214 physician offices, and 60 other facilities. The width (degrees) of each slice represents the relative service volume. The radius of each slice represents the average charge. The Medicare reimbursement rate is $42.13. Mark K. Meiselbach, BSc 1 Ge Bai, PhD, CPA 1,3 Gerard F. Anderson, PhD 1,2 a b Figure 2 Average charges for COVID-19 testing, by state. a Diagnostic testing (CPT code: 87635), N = 182,149. States that had ten or fewer claims were classified as "No data." The Medicare reimbursement rate is $51.31. b Antibody testing (CPT code: 86769), N = 318,546. States that had ten or fewer services were classified as "No data." The Medicare reimbursement rate is $42.13. Two friends in Texas were tested for coronavirus Variation in the ratio of physician charges to Medicare payments by specialty and region Diagnostic Testing (CPT Code: 87635) CPT Code: 86769) Extreme markup: the fifty US hospitals with the highest charge-to-cost ratios United States Congress. H.R.748 -CARES Act FAQs about Families First Coronavirus Response Act and Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act implementation COVID-19 Research Database Publisher's Note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.