Low-cost, high-volume health services contribute the most to unnecessary health spending

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Abstract

An analysis of data for 2014 about forty-four low-value health services in the Virginia All Payer Claims Database revealed more than $586 million in unnecessary costs. Among these low-value services, those that were low and very low cost ($538 or less per service) were delivered far more frequently than services that were high and very high cost ($539 or more). The combined costs of the former group were nearly twice those of the latter (65 percent versus 35 percent).

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Mafi, J. N., Russell, K., Bortz, B. A., Dachary, M., Hazel, W. A., & Fendrick, A. M. (2017). Low-cost, high-volume health services contribute the most to unnecessary health spending. Health Affairs, 36(10), 1701–1704. https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2017.0385

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