The Elephant in the Hospital Room Charge

2020
The parents of a child recently hospitalized for 3 days for bronchiolitis receive the bill in the mail for their child’s hospital stay. They are stunned by the total amount of the bill. They notice that the hospital room charge accounts for nearly three-fourths of the billed amount. The bill provides no information about the room charge. The parents wonder, “What is this charge? What goes into it? Why is it so expensive?” They are grateful that the bill is covered almost fully by their child’s health insurance. In the current issue of Pediatrics , Synhorst et al1 assessed variation across children’s hospitals in the cost of care for pediatric patients hospitalized with asthma, bronchiolitis, and other common pediatric illnesses. Patients’ hospital rooms accounted for the majority of total hospital costs, whereas nonroom costs (eg, medications, laboratory testing) contributed much less. The authors concluded that initiatives to improve the quality of hospital care for common pediatric illnesses have limited opportunity to meaningfully reduce costs without addressing hospital room costs. Synhorst et al1 highlight the difficulty of conducting research on hospital cost of care using administrative data that provide little information about the biggest expense on the bill: the patient’s room. Although Synhorst et al1 suggest that room costs broadly include overhead and staffing expenses, there are neither established definitions nor … Address correspondence to Jay Berry, MD, MPH, Department of Medicine, Boston Children’s Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02130. E-mail: jay.berry{at}childrens.harvard.edu
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