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Hospitals and insurers don’t see eye-to-eye on COVID-19 treatment costs

The deadlock over standardised COVID-19 treatment charges continues as insurers and hospitals harden their positions, leaving patients in the lurch

August 17, 2020 / 12:48 IST
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After the General Insurance Council released its indicative rate chart for COVID-19 treatment last month, hospitals have put out a charge structure that they believe is reasonable. These rates are 70-108 per cent higher than GI Council’s charge structure. “We have shared our rates with the GI Council. Further discussions with the council to reach a consensus continue,” says Dr Alexander Thomas, President, Association of Healthcare Providers (India).

The hospital data, collated by AHPI, is based on treatment records of six hospitals across the country, including Narayana Health, Bangalore, Medica Super Specialty Hospital, Kolkata and Bhagat Chandra Hospital, Delhi. This data forms part of the report prepared by a committee comprising insurance and hospital officials as also independent experts. Chaired by Dr S Raghunath, Professor of Strategy, Indian Institute of Management Bangalore, it was constituted to compare the AHPI’s and GIC’s costs for COVID-19 treatment at private hospitals.  

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Huge gap in cost structures

The gap between the GI Council’s rates and hospitals’ charge structures is extremely wide. For example, the former has prescribed a cap of Rs 10,000 per day for isolation beds with oxygen care, while the hospital association’s estimates suggest a cost of Rs 21,931 a day. Likewise, insurers have decided to pay daily charges of up to Rs 18,000 for intensive care unit (ICU) with ventilator care, whereas the hospital body has quoted Rs 37,358. Hospitals’ charge structure has been computed assuming that a patient would have an average of 10-14 days’ stay.