National health spending is projected to have reached $5.7 trillion in 2025, up 7.3% from 2024, according to an analysis by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services published June 24 by Health Affairs. It marks the third consecutive year of growth greater than 7%. CMS projects growth to continue in 2026 due to continued demand for high-cost retail prescription drugs, mostly from individuals with Medicare and private insurance. However, the growth rate will slow “as a result of Marketplace enrollment declines and legislation affecting Medicaid payments and enrollment.” The authors noted that “compared with the faster growth in utilization, health price growth … has been fairly moderate and is expected to average roughly 2.5 percent through 2026.” By 2034, health spending is expected to grow to nearly $9 trillion and the insured share of the population is expected to decline to 90.5%, down from 91.7% in 2025. 

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The New York Times published a letter to the editor May 16 by AHA President and CEO Rick Pollack that responds to a May 4 op-ed that claimed hospitals are…
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An AHA blog says an essay published in The New York Times wrongly frames hospitals as the leading “culprit” behind rising health care costs. “It…
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A May 4 guest essay published in The New York Times frames hospitals as the leading “culprit” behind rising health care costs. It reduces a complex health…
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A Health Affairs report published April 6 examined how changes in patient cost-sharing liability can impact hospital finances. The study found that…
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Recent analyses of national health spending have again placed hospitals at the center of the affordability debate. A recent Kaiser Family Foundation brief…
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From birth to death, from critical injuries to elective surgeries, from crisis and disaster to community food banks and health improvement initiatives —…