Angie Carlson faced a tough choice when buying health insurance for her employees at DataIQ in Eden Prairie last year: Keep her existing coverage, which allowed employees to use the vaunted Mayo Clinic, or exclude Mayo and instantly save 5 percent on premiums.She knew her workers would appreciate the savings. But how would they feel about losing access to one of the best known health systems in the world? None of them had ever traveled to Rochester for medical care, but one had an eye condition that might suddenly require sophisticated treatment.
"What if that worsens?" she wondered.
Carlson stuck with Mayo this year, and will do so again next year. But her debate underscores the challenges facing Minnesota's premier medical institution as economic, demographic and political forces combine to transform the way health care is delivered and paid for in the United States.
Mayo has been lauded by President Obama and influential health economists as an example of superb care and medical efficiency. Yet Mayo also has a reputation in Minnesota — confirmed by publicly available health data — for high prices.
How Mayo resolves that paradox will determine the future of a clinic that has become a signature Minnesota brand. Mayo draws patients from all 50 states and more than 130 countries each year. With nearly 41,000 Minnesota employees, it is the state's largest private employer and, as of this year, a partner with taxpayers in a $327 million venture to elevate the state as a global medical destination.
"If Mayo Clinic were perceived as being too expensive and not worth it, it would be a huge risk to the organization," said Mayo CEO Dr. John Noseworthy.
As Mayo celebrates 150 years of history, it's adapting aggressively to meet the coming wave of reforms. It is extending its brand nationally through exclusive affiliation agreements with smaller hospitals around the country. It's investing more money in a lab that develops and exports cost-saving medical techniques. And it's formed an unusual alliance with the nation's biggest health insurer, UnitedHealth Group, to use "Big Data" to prove and improve the value of Mayo's services.
Premium care, prices
The financial squeeze facing hospitals and clinics has been building for years; total U.S. health spending has slowed sharply since 2008 and last year grew at the slowest pace on record.