Making progress on improving health care quality and value requires detailed, longitudinal data that tracks health sector spending, employment, and costs. States in particular need these data to assess their own health sectors, track changes over time, and compare their progress to national trends. This need for accurate, up-to-date data at the state level has become increasingly important given the ways the COVID-19 pandemic drastically affected the health economy in 2020 and beyond—when unprecedented shifts in health care utilization, spending, employment, and coverage occurred.
In this report, Altarum experts applied their Health Sector Economic Indicator (HSEI) framework that benchmarks to and builds on official Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) data using other data sources to estimate current trends. They replicate the prior analyses published last year and incorporate new data from CMS, the Commonwealth’s All-Payer Claims Database, and other public sources. They provide the first comprehensive picture of 2020 health economic data for Virginia, including spending by health components and payers, trends in employment, trends in private health insurance costs, and federal government support for health care providers.
Select major findings from the report include:
A variety of other data, assessments, and insights from Virginia’s health sector are available in the report, including comparisons of the Commonwealth’s health sector to national trends and interpretations of these changes over time. Detailed data sources, methodologies, and assumptions are included in a report appendix. The authors would like to thank the Virginia Hospital and Healthcare Association for their support of this work and the Virginia Health Information organization for their assistance and for providing data from the All-Payer Claims Database.