The report I provided is government spending, which under Obamacare has gone up pretty significantly. Your report may be a bit misleading due to the fact that insurance premiums and deductibles have soared. People may be spending less money on healthcare because they simply cannot afford it.
For this upcoming year, to ensure my 34 year old wife and her daughter who is 13, costs roughly 500 bucks per month with a $10,000 deductible. It is simply stunning how expensive it is. So she only goes to the doctor when it is absolutely necessary.
We use Golden Rule which is a subsidiary of United healthcare.
The government part has gone up with Obamacare for sure while the growth in the country's total expenditure has dropped significantly. FYI -
Insurance premiums are considered as a cost in computing the cost of national healthcare so they are included in the figures that I've quoted and are a significant part of those figures.
The increase in 2017 total healthcare costs is expected to be higher than recent increases due to significant insurance premium increases. Impact is projected to increase the rate of growth from about 5% to somewhere in 6-7% range.
I'm fortunate to work for a European company that has extremely good insurance. It's good enough to be in the "Cadillac Tax" category, which is one of the dumbest government ideas ever.
In my case our plan for 51 year old wife and I (no kids) p
--Premium=200 bi weekly = $5200/year
--Deductible=800 max per family per year
--Out of pocket max = 2,000 per family per year
--Annual physical covered (no co-pay)
--Small co-pays for doctor visits ($20 primary, $30 non-primary)
Being a European company we have a sliding premium so that those with lower incomes pay less. For example, bi weekly premium for people grossing under 90k is ~20% less than mine. Lowest premium is about 40% less.
We also have an alternative very high deductible option where the premium is much lower.
Our company insurance is through Blue Cross and we have had minimal premium increases over the last 5 years.