U.S. spending on health care declined for the first time in 60 years in first-quarter 2022, falling 1.7% year over year as health care prices fell relative to inflation, according to released today by Altarum. As a share of gross domestic product, health care spending fell from 20% in mid-2020 to 18% in May 2022.

鈥淸W]e expect that when final CMS national health expenditure data are released for 2021 and 2022 that they will likely show a meaningful dip in the real long-term health care cost trend, at least temporarily alleviating some of the spending pressures that occurred in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic,鈥 the report states.

This inflation-adjusted reduction occurred while economy-wide inflation reached 40-year highs, which also has tremendous impacts on hospital input costs. According to a recent AHA report, hospitals have experienced surging costs for labor, drugs, supplies, equipment and other resources required to care for patients since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. For example, labor expenses per patient rose 19.1% between 2019 and 2021, with travel nurse costs surging to a median 39% of nurse labor expenses by January 2022. Supply costs rose 21% per patient overall, with median drug costs up 37% per patient and intensive care unit medical supply costs up 32% per patient.
 

Related News Articles

Headline
The National Institutes of Health Feb. 7 issued supplemental guidance on updating negotiated indirect cost rates for new and existing NIH grants. The NIH will鈥
Headline
The net prices of five drugs included in a new study from the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review increased without clinical justification in 2023.鈥
Headline
The National Academy for State Health Policy鈥檚 Hospital Cost Tool 鈥渕isses the mark in many ways, and its use by payers, purchasers and policymakers could have鈥
Perspective
There will always be administrative costs associated with operating a hospital. But the lion鈥檚 share of a hospital鈥檚 resources should be devoted to doing what鈥
Blog
Last week, several academics released a working paper saying hospital prices lead to employment losses outside the health sector, among other faulty鈥
Perspective
Hospitals hold an extraordinary place in our society by offering comfort and caring to all who walk through their doors, regardless of ability to pay.While the鈥