(Bloomberg Business) — Dealing with medical bills, like waiting for the cable guy or buying a used car, has become a cliché of consumer exasperation. Everything from electricity and phone bills to tax returns and parking tickets migrated to electronic payments years ago, but America's $2.9 trillion health care economy remains stubbornly stuck in the 1990s.
The number of medical bills paid by paper check through the U.S. mail has even increased while payments for all other services have decreased dramatically. Medical payments are the only category to register an increase in paperwork since the start of the 21st century.
It's not just consumers who are paying by mail. Just 15 percent of commercial insurers make payments to medical providers electronically, according to a report last month from PricewaterhouseCoopers Health Research Institute.
The largest insurers are usually the best at going digital, but Cigna, with 14.5 million customers, sends only 39 percent of payments electronically. That's because many doctors aren't signed up to receive electronic transfers, according to spokesman Joe Mondy. Aetna and UnitedHealth Group, in contrast, both say around 80 percent of payments are paperless.
Hospitals, medical offices, and insurance companies need an army of workers to push all that paper, which is also frequently shuffled through middlemen like billing agencies and clearinghouses. One claims clearinghouse, Emdeon, which handles paper billing for many of its health plan clients, spent $87 million on postage alone in the first three months of 2015 — nearly a quarter of its total revenue — according to financial filings. All this bureaucracy pushed the cost of administering private insurance to $173 billion in 2013, according to federal data.
But there's also the human cost of sending people piles of indecipherable paperwork as they're recovering from an illness or operation. "You pull your hair and you get frustrated. You don't understand why it's all paper and it's all phone calls and you waste time and you get confused, and it's all so broken," says Tomer Shoval, chief executive and co-founder of Simplee, one of several companies trying to streamline medical billing.
So what's taken so long for health care payments to go digital? Inertia explains a lot of the delay. Doctors and health plans have to invest in technology to allow electronic payments, and smaller concerns — the solo practitioner or local health plan — may not think it's worth it.
Many physicians have only recently switched to digital health records. And unlike other industries such as banking and telecom, where companies compete for customers on price, medical providers and health plans have long been able to pass the costs of their inefficiency onto customers with little consequence.
Then there's the fragmentation of the health system. Thousands of hospitals, physician offices, health plans, and other parties act independently and don't have incentives to coordinate. Athenahealth, which provides health records software to 62,000 physicians, developed a system to submit claims to insurers digitally before patients leave the office, so doctors could determine how much patients will owe and collect it on the spot. But only a tiny fraction of doctors use the system, says Athenahealth chief medical officer Todd Rothenhaus, partly because only a handful of insurers participate.
Some say insurers benefit from the complexity: The harder it is to collect on a claim, the more likely doctors will stop chasing payment. "Arcane rules create a situation where doctors decide it's not worth their time to collect the money," Rothenhaus says.
There are some attempts to haltingly move the whole system to be more efficient. The Affordable Care Act limits how much insurance companies can spend on everything other than medical costs. If they spend too much premium money on administrative costs, they have to send rebates back to consumers. The law required health plans to be able to pay doctors with electronic transfers by January 2014.