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. 2020 Dec 1;3(12):e2029419.
doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.29419.

Breadth and Exclusivity of Hospital and Physician Networks in US Insurance Markets

Affiliations

Breadth and Exclusivity of Hospital and Physician Networks in US Insurance Markets

John A Graves et al. JAMA Netw Open. .

Abstract

Importance: Little is known about the breadth of health care networks or the degree to which different insurers' networks overlap.

Objective: To quantify network breadth and exclusivity (ie, overlap) among primary care physician (PCP), cardiology, and general acute care hospital networks for employer-based (large group and small group), individually purchased (marketplace), Medicare Advantage (MA), and Medicaid managed care (MMC) plans.

Design, setting, and participants: This cross-sectional study included 1192 networks from Vericred. The analytic unit was the network-zip code-clinician type-market, which captured attributes of networks from the perspective of a hypothetical patient seeking access to in-network clinicians or hospitals within a 60-minute drive.

Exposures: Enrollment in a private insurance plan.

Main outcomes and measures: Percentage of in-network physicians and/or hospitals within a 60-minute drive from a hypothetical patient in a given zip code (breadth). Number of physicians and/or hospitals within each network that overlapped with other insurers' networks, expressed as a percentage of the total possible number of shared connections (exclusivity). Descriptive statistics (mean, quantiles) were produced overall and by network breadth category, as follows: extra-small (<10%), small (10%-25%), medium (25%-40%), large (40%-60%), and extra-large (>60%). Networks were analyzed by insurance type, state, and insurance, physician, and/or hospital market concentration level, as measured by the Hirschman-Herfindahl index.

Results: Across all US zip code-network observations, 415 549 of 511 143 large-group PCP networks (81%) were large or extra-large compared with 138 485 of 202 702 MA (68%), 191 918 of 318 082 small-group (60%), 60 425 of 149 841 marketplace (40%), and 21 781 of 66 370 MMC (40%) networks. Large-group employer networks had broader coverage than all other network plans (mean [SD] PCP breadth: large-group employer-based plans, 57.3% [20.1]; small-group employer-based plans, 45.7% [21.4]; marketplace, 36,4% [21.2]; MMC, 32.3% [19.3]; MA, 47.4% [18.3]). MMC networks were the least exclusive (a mean [SD] overlap of 61.3% [10.5] for PCPs, 66.5% [9.8] for cardiology, and 60.2% [12.3] for hospitals). Networks were narrowest (mean [SD] breadth 42.4% [16.9]) and most exclusive (mean [SD] overlap 47.7% [23.0]) in California and broadest (79.9% [16.6]) and least exclusive (71.1% [14.6]) in Nebraska. Rising levels of insurer and market concentration were associated with broader and less exclusive networks. Markets with concentrated primary care and insurance markets had the broadest (median [interquartile range {IQR}], 75.0% [60.0%-83.1%]) and least exclusive (median [IQR], 63.7% [52.4%-73.7%]) primary care networks among large-group commercial plans, while markets with least concentration had the narrowest (median [IQR], 54.6% [46.8%-67.6%]) and most exclusive (median [IQR], 49.4% [41.9%-56.9%]) networks.

Conclusions and relevance: In this study, narrower health care networks had a relatively large degree of overlap with other networks in the same geographic area, while broader networks were associated with physician, hospital, and insurance market concentration. These results suggest that many patients could switch to a lower-cost, narrow network plan without losing in-network access to their PCP, although future research is needed to assess the implications for care quality and clinical integration across in-network health care professionals and facilities in narrow network plans.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Dr Everson reported receiving personal fees from the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology and the Urban Institute and grants from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation outside the submitted work. Dr Polsky reported receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and Arnold Ventures outside the submitted work. No other disclosures were reported.

Figures

Figure.
Figure.. Primary Care Hospital and Physician Network Breadth
The figure shows the percentage of observations in each network breadth category by specialty or type and insurance type. Network breadth was defined as the percentage of hospitals or physicians within a 60-minute drive that were in-network for each zip code–specialty type–insurance type–network combination. In total there were 1 248 138 such observations for primary care networks, 1 173 486 for cardiology networks, and 1 446 413 for hospital networks. The continuous network breadth measure was then categorized based on the following sizes: extra small (XS; <10% breadth); small (S; 11%-25%); medium (M; 26%-40%); large (L; 41%-60%); and extra large (XL; >60%).

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