Feature

Health spending nears $23,000 per family


 

Health care spending for a family of four covered by insurance from a large employer in the United States averaged almost $23,000 in 2018, the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) said.

That average cost represents the employer’s contribution to the insurance premium ($15,159), along with the employee’s premium ($4,706) and the family’s out-of-pocket spending ($3,020), according to a KFF analysis of IBM MarketScan data and the 2018 KFF Employer Health Benefits Survey.

“Buying a new car every year would be a very impractical expense. It would also be cheaper than a year’s worth of health care for a family,” KFF President and CEO Drew Altman, PhD, wrote in his Axios column.

A little searching on the Kelley Blue Book Car Finder shows that the average family could have purchased a pretty nice new vehicle for the $22,885 that was spent on their health care in 2018:

  • Mazda6 sedan: $22,845.
  • Mini 2-door hatchback: $22,450.
  • Jeep Renegade SUV: $21,040.
  • Nissan Frontier king cab pickup: $20,035.

“The cost-shifting and complexity of health insurance can hide its high cost, which crowds out families’ other needs and depresses workers’ wages,” Dr. Altman said.

Recommended Reading

Minimally invasive cosmetic surgery: Steady growth in 2018
MDedge Surgery
Some burnout factors are within a physician’s control
MDedge Surgery
CMS proposes improved E/M payments, additional price transparency for hospitals
MDedge Surgery
Mayo Clinic takes honors as top hospital
MDedge Surgery
Poll: Medicare-for-all sees slight drop in support
MDedge Surgery
Burnout gets personal for 68% of physicians
MDedge Surgery
Professional coaching keeps doctors in the game
MDedge Surgery
Medical societies urge action to reduce gun violence
MDedge Surgery
Lancet joins movement to reject ‘manels’
MDedge Surgery
Unsubsidized enrollees leaving insurance exchanges
MDedge Surgery