Woman in gardening hat next to plants

(Updated 2023) Our work with PriceCheck, our health cost transparency partnerships with media and other organizations, has stretched across the nation, bringing thousands of people to our partner web sites to share and search prices — from databases, from our reporting, and from our communities.

We build interactive software and place it on our partners’ sites, using pricing information from three sources. First, we survey local providers for their cash or self-pay prices on common, shoppable procedures — or, sometimes, prices of bigger-ticket items. We use that data to pre-populate a database. Second, we encourage community members to come and share their pricing information, from their bills or “explanation of benefits” forms from an insurer. Third, we also display the Medicare reimbursement rate for a collection of thousands of procedures catalogued in the Healthcare Common Procedural Coding System (HCPCS) used by the government in different geographic regions.

In this way, we display a 360-degree view of pricing. We don’t have every price for every procedure at every provider across the nation — that data does not exist anywhere — but we have a “community-created guide to health costs” that informs people and gives them a sense of agency in the bewildering world of health care pricing.  People can share and search the data, and we use the data to write and tell about the costs of health care.

With the pandemic, we pivoted to cover all Covid all the time. Our reporting has focused on the things the Average Joe and the Average Jeanne need to get by.

That has included testing (where to get tested, do you have to pay, why are the tests so awful?). We’ve also done a lot of work on people who have long Covid, on workplace issues in the pandemic era, on the seismic changes to the health care system — and on how to get vaccinated. With the vaccine rollout so messy, we’ve supplied reliable and actionable information to our communities and our partners about this topic.

We have won a number of journalism prizes. With CBS News, we won the 2019 Society of Professional Journalists – Sigma Delta Chi Public Service gold medal for network news for our health costs partnership, “Medical Price Roulette.”

We won the public service award for 2017 for small-market TV with WVUE Fox 8 Live and NOLA.com I The Times Picayune, for our “Cracking the Code” health cost work in New Orleans.

“Cracking the Code” also won a national Edward R. Murrow award and was a finalist for a Peabody Award, one of the most prestigious honors in American journalism. Other news finalists are primarily big organizations like CNN, ABC, PBS, Vice, the BBC, etc.

Our previous work with partners including KQED public radio in San Francisco, KPCC public radio in Los Angeles, WHYY public radio in Philadelphia and others has won numerous state, regional and local awards.

Here’s a bit about our partnerships.

CBS News

We launched our CBS News partnership in September 2019, under the name “Medical Price Roulette.” The series won the 2020 public service gold medal from the Society for Professional Journalists for network TV.

Here’s the first story from Anna Werner, national consumer investigative correspondent at CBS This Morning.  She interviewed Frank Esposito, who faced close to $700,000 in medical costs after receiving surgery after an emergency room visit for a herniated disk. He says doctors told him he could have been partially paralyzed if he did not have immediate surgery. He had insurance, but just weeks after the surgery, the bills came rolling in. His insurance company claimed the surgery was not medically necessary. He has hired a professional to fight back and has tapped into his retirement account to pay bills.

Our work has been featured on CBS This Morning (7-9 A.M. ET), CBS Evening News (6:30-7 P.M. ET) and the CBSN streaming network, as well as the CBS  News Radio Network and other CBS properties.

We use shoe-leather reporting, crowdsourcing, data journalism and other tools to tell people what stuff costs. We started out with a survey of cash or self-pay prices in two sample cities — Dallas and San Francisco — and we’re asking people across the nation to share their prices with us to help in our reporting.

“Medical Price Roulette” has explored the problems and solutions surrounding the lack of transparency of medical costs charged by hospitals and providers and why they vary – often dramatically. We started by collecting the prices of 30-35 common, “shoppable” medical procedures in those two metro areas and discovered drastic variations we’ve seen in other cities across the nation. Here’s the teaser they ran on Sept. 20.

With the pivot to Covid during the pandemic, we have covered things like testing, a big company that was trying to force employees to return to the office in summer of 2020, and costs of things related to Covid testing and treatment.

Here’s the project page, which will collect all of our work.

“Consumers often complain of suffering from health care bill sticker shock after undergoing a medical procedure,” said Kimberly Godwin, CBS News’ Executive Vice President of News. “This important series will take a deep dive on this topic and shed light on why the same test can cost different prices, why medical bills are hard to understand and what steps people can take to avoid being surprised by medical bills in the future.”

CBS News is the news and information division of CBS Corporation, dedicated to providing the highest quality journalism under standards it pioneered and continues to set in today’s digital age. Headquartered in the famed CBS Broadcast Center in New York, CBS News has bureaus across the globe and produces influential, critically acclaimed programs providing original reporting, interviews, investigations, analysis and breaking news 24 hours a day, seven days a week. CBS News provides news and information for the CBS Television Network, CBSN, CBSNews.com, CBS News Radio and CBS Mobile. CBS News is home to the nation’s #1 news program, 60 MINUTES, CBSN, the 24/7 digital streaming news network, and the award winning broadcasts CBS THIS MORNING, THE CBS EVENING NEWS, CBS SUNDAY MORNING, 48 HOURS and FACE THE NATION.

Our New York City vaccine partnership

We launched our partnership to increase vaccine distribution in an underserved New York City neighborhood in July 2021, working with two New York-based news organizations,  Epicenter-NYC, a Queens hyperlocal, and TBN24, serving the Bangladeshi emigre community.

This work in Queens Village, a part of the New York City borough of Queens that borders on Long Island and occupies zip code 11429, was part of a grant called the Vaccine Equity Partner Engagement, with the Fund for Public Health of New York City, using Centers for Disease Control money, in partnership with the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene of New York City.

Over 18 months, we developed a partnership with New York Health + Hospitals, the public health giant, and the SS Joachim and Anne Roman Catholic Church, and ultimately vaccinated and tested thousands and thousands of people. Our presence on a Queens street corner extended our preceding reporting on the disaster that was the Covid vaccine rollout, and brought our journalism sensibility to bear on a tough public health conundrum.

The work began with encouraging vaccine delivery to underserved neighborhoods in the New York City Taskforce for Racial Inclusion and Equity neighborhoods. The goal changed with the circumstances. Initially vaccine persuasion and delivery were the goals; then testing became one of the deliverables; then delivering information about broader topics like primary care, education, financial aid, food insecurity and legal consultations became part of the program.

The partnership won the Digital Innovation national award for “Best Audience Listening Strategy” from the Local Media Association and the 2023 public service gold medal from LION Publishers, another nationwide journalism group.

“Journalism, at its core, is a form of community service, and this trio went above and beyond by not only highlighting disparities but also providing services that had a transformative and potentially life-saving impact on people’s lives,” said the judges for the LION prize.

The LMA judges said: “This project is truly inspiring. Partnering with two other news organizations to bring a life-saving vaccine to a community in need brings new meaning to journalism’s mission of ‘serving the public.’ … This line right here says it all: ‘Meeting people where they are. Engagement. Listening.’ This is how journalism changes peoples’ lives.”

Our WNYC-Gothamist partnership

We launched our new partnership with WNYC and Gothamist in November 2019, under the name “#PriceCheckNYC,” underwritten by the New York State Health Foundation.

Our work was featured on the Gothamist.com home page, and on Brian Lehrer’s show at WNYC. Read Caroline Lewis’s story about the project on Gothamist—for instance, ClearHealthCosts found that a cholesterol test at a lab in the Bronx costs $21 cash—but a hospital charged $1,294. Check our our launch on WNYC with Brian Lehrer.

Several months in, when the pandemic struck, we pivoted to report on all Covid, all the time. First we dove into testing — where can I get tested, should I get tested, why is it so hard to get tested, who will pay for me to get tested, and why are the tests so unreliable?

We added reporting on the return to the workplace, long Covid, the seismic changes in the health care system and the chaotic rollout of the vaccine.

In all, we took part in nearly 3 dozen stories, and we were on the Brian Lehrer show six times, including a live Brian Lehrer update, in the Greene Space at WNYC, before the partnership ended in October 2020.

Here’s a bit about WNYC/Gothamist: “With an urban vibrancy and a global perspective, New York Public Radio (NYPR) produces innovative public radio programs, podcasts, and live events that touch a passionate community of 23.4 million people monthly on air, online and in person. From its state-of-the-art studios in New York City, NYPR is reshaping radio for a new generation of listeners with groundbreaking, award-winning programs including Radiolab, On the Media, The Takeaway, Nancy and Carnegie Hall Live, Aria Code, among many others. New York Public Radio includes WNYC, WQXR, WNYC Studios, Gothamist, The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space, and New Jersey Public Radio. Further information about programs, podcasts, and stations may be found at www.nypublicradio.org.”

KXAN, Austin, Texas

We launched our KXAN News partnership in September 2022, under the name “Medical Debt Lawsuits.” Our partnership won a 2023 national Edward R. Murrow award for excellence in innovation in large-market television coverage from the Radio Television Digital News Association.

In partnership with the award-winning KXAN News investigative team, we researched medical debt in Texas, and its effects on ordinary people. The investigation began with an anonymous tip. The more we investigated, the more we learned that the scope of the problem is vast in Texas alone.

Find the KXAN Medical Debt work at kxan.com/medical-debt.  It documents how medical debt lawsuits have hit hundreds of Texas residents, prompting questions from lawmakers. In response to a callout to Texas residents, we received a wave of responses from Texans who wanted to tell their stories.

In the wake of the partnership, Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas signed a medical cost transparency bill to make information about costs available to Texans into law. The bill requires hospitals that are asking for money from patients to send them a written, understandable, itemized invoice before sending them to collections.

The KXAN team has won a series of investigative awards under the leadership of Josh Hinkle, director of investigations and innovation and political host. Awards include Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Television Political Journalism, national Sigma Delta Chi Award for Best Documentary, a National Edward R. Murrow Award in the podcast category in 2020 and a national Murrow in the multimedia category for a collection of “KXAN Investigates” digital projects. KXAN has also won multiple other Emmys, a Scripps Howard Award national finalist award, and was a Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting national semi-finalist.

The River Newsroom, in the Hudson Valley

In early 2021, we launched a partnership with the hyperlocal The River in New York’s Hudson Valley region. Our first project together is a guide to getting the Covid vaccine in the region, which stretches from the urban Westchester County suburbs of New York City up to the rural Catskills region. Our partners have shared with us the writing and updating tasks associated with this undertaking, which necessitated careful watching in a rapidly changing situation. We also talked about our work on WIOX, the Catskills’ community radio station.

About The River Newsroom: “The River is an independent news outlet that seeks to provide a regional lens on topics of national importance by producing in-depth, quality journalism and analysis for the Hudson Valley and Catskills regions.

“Journalism is essential to a functioning democracy, and the need for local reporting that engages with the issues is urgent. Our mission is to help our community better understand itself. In this way, we believe we can contribute to a more vibrant, informed, and engaged region.

“The River endeavors to produce fair, honest, and accurate reporting and analysis of the issues of the day—and how they affect residents of the Hudson Valley and Catskills.”

inewsource, San Diego

In early 2021, we launched a partnership with inewsource, a San Diego hyperlocal nonprofit newsroom. The topic of the partnership is not public yet.

About inewsource: “inewsource is a nonprofit, nonpartisan newsroom dedicated to improving lives in the San Diego region and beyond through impactful, data-based investigative and accountability journalism.

“inewsource launched in 2009, amid a deep recession and a catastrophic downsizing of newspapers and network media in San Diego and across the country. Some of the greatest casualties of the disruption were investigative journalists, bulldogs in the industry whose passion was uncovering wrongs and wrongdoers in the name of the public good.”

New Orleans

Fox 8 web page

We launched our New Orleans PriceCheck partnership in April 2017, crowdsourcing health prices with partners WVUE FOX 8 Live and NOLA.com I The Times-Picayune.

WVUE FOX 8 News, owned by Louisiana Media Company, and operated by Raycom Media, leads New Orleans, Louisiana, the state and the region in the field of broadcast investigative journalism. Lee Zurik, the chief investigative reporter and anchor, has won multiple Murrow, Peabody, Dupont, IRE and other awards for investigative journalism, including one in April 2017 from the Investigative Reporters and Editors for his series “Medical Waste,” about health care pricing.

blood test costs

NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune is part of the largest media company in Louisiana, delivering news and information with an intense focus on communities, reaching an audience of 7 million unique readers each month. Jed Lipinski, our primary partner there, has been part of multiple award-winning journalism projects. He is joined by Manuel Torres, also a multiple award-winner.

We won the public service award for 2017 for small-market TV with WVUE Fox 8 Live and NOLA.com I The Times Picayune, for our “Cracking the Code” health cost work in New Orleans.

“Cracking the Code” also won a national Edward R. Murrow award and was a finalist for a Peabody Award, one of the most prestigious honors in American journalism. Other news finalists are primarily big organizations like CNN, ABC, PBS, Vice, the BBC, etc.

For news coverage, look here at WVUE FOX 8 Live and here at NOLA.com I The Times-Picayune.

This page on our home site has a listing of all the coverage.

The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Daily News, philly.com and 6ABC

The Inquirer logo 1

We’re launching a partnership with The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Philadelphia Daily News and philly.com, and their partner 6ABC News.

The partnership  is funded under the first funding round for innovation in journalism from the Lenfest Institute, the nonprofit parent of The Inquirer, The Daily News and philly.com. We’ll use shoe-leather reporting, crowdsourcing, data journalism and other tools to tell people what stuff costs in partnership with the city’s top television investigative team at 6ABC, WPVI news.

6ABC News logo


The project was one of several in a $2 million round of funding, the Lenfest Institute’s first, announced recently. In the category of “public service and investigative journalism,” in the Philadelphia-centered part of the grant funding announcement, our work is described in these words: “Consumer Healthcare Coverage: PMN will add both reporting and web-development capabilities to examine local healthcare data and issues related to health costs and quality to help consumers make more informed decisions.” The grant announcement is here.

“We were delighted by the response to our open call for innovative ideas to help advance the business of local journalism,” said Jim Friedlich, executive director of the Institute.  “The Institute was founded with the belief that local journalism depends for its success on investment in high-impact news content, best-of-breed digital product development, and the cultivation of a new, diverse and growing audience of readers,” Friedlich said.

About the institute, from its web site: “The Lenfest Institute for Journalism is the first-of-its-kind non-profit organization whose sole mission is to develop and support sustainable business models for great local journalism. The Institute was founded in 2016 by cable television entrepreneur H.F. (Gerry) Lenfest. Lenfest gifted to the Institute an initial endowment of $20 million, which has since been supplemented by other donors, for investment in innovative news initiatives, new technology, and new models for sustainable journalism. Lenfest also gifted his ownership of the Philadelphia Media Network (The Philadelphia Inquirer, Philadelphia Daily News, and philly.com, the Philadelphia region’s largest local news website) and these news properties now serve as a live lab for the Institute’s innovation efforts. … The Philadelphia news properties are now the largest newspapers in America operated as a public-benefit corporation, under the non-profit ownership of the Institute, dedicated solely to the mission of preserving local journalism nationwide. “

California: San Francisco and Los Angeles

KQED Price Check

Our first PriceCheck project crowdsourcing health care prices in California, funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, is at this link in San Francisco, and at this link in Los Angeles. The reporting from the three partners — us at clearhealthcosts, KQED public radio in San Francisco and KPCC/Southern California Public Radio in Los Angeles — has been collected on this Tumblr.

News coverage was collected on these local station pages, at KPCC/SCPR and KQED, and also on our home blog — on the blog page, search “KQED” or “KPCC” or “California” for an inventory.

Florida: Miami, Tampa-St. Petersburg, Health News Florida

PriceCheck Florida launch article screenshot

We launched our Florida PriceCheck partnership in April 2016, crowdsourcing health prices with new partners WLRN public radio in Miami and WUSF public radio in Tampa Bay, and their Health News Florida collaboration.

In the first two days after launch, our web analytics show that we had visits from the Florida Legislature, the Florida Department of Insurance, the Florida Department of Health, Humana, UnitedHealthCare, Cigna, Aetna, the Blues, and about a dozen Florida hospitals. Also visiting: Carnegie Mellon, Johns Hopkins, the Washington State Attorney General, the Broward County Commission and scores of others.

For news coverage, look here at WLRN and here at WUSF.

Florida’s an interesting place. The legislature recently enacted one of the strongest state laws protecting consumers against surprise out-of-network medical bills. It also passed a law that seeks to give Florida one of the nation’s most robust healthcare price and quality transparency systems. While the bill has lofty aims, many other such transparency bills in other states have resulted in only partial achievement of price and quality transparency.

So our effort comes against a backdrop of lawmakers recognizing there’s a problem, and seeking to fix it.

“Consumers skeptical about the real cost of health care will soon have a resource where they can ask and share with their neighbors the price of common medical procedures,” Mary Shedden, news director of WUSF, wrote in announcing our partnership.

WHYY-Philadelphia

NewsWorks web page

We  also launched with WHYY public radio in Philadelphia, with funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Listen to our launch broadcast with Marty Moss-Coane, the leading Philadelphia radio talk show host of Radio Times.

For our news coverage, look here. Some examples: “What if restaurants billed like hospitals?” And “Patients want to price-shop for care, but many on-line tools are unreliable.”

New York City

Hospital prices and payment graph

Our initial pilot project with WNYC public radio in 2013 brought nearly 400 women to the WNYC pages to tell us what they were charged and what they paid for their mammograms.

The interactive tools are no longer active (WNYC overhauled its website) but we got a ton of traffic and great news coverage. We were also able to make interesting charts like this one, which shows the difference between charged price and payments for mammograms at hospitals and imaging centers. The price differences are dramatic. The blog post in which this is embedded is one of several we wrote during the project; there’s a list with links at the bottom of the piece.

Our New York pricing data, which you can find by using the search tools at the top of each page of our site, incorporates information from providers in New York state, New Jersey and Connecticut. In New Jersey, we have prices in northern New Jersey (the New York City metro area) and in southern New Jersey (the Philadelphia metro area).

MedPage Today

Health price transparency article

Here’s our Medpage Today partnership, with links to coverage.

Here’s our Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ), and here’s a post describing the Clearhealthcosts.com partnership with MedPage Today. Here’s the lead editor’s note, and here’s a moving essay by a doctor telling us why this is so important. And here’s a page with links to several MedPage Today posts.

Texas

In Texas, we have cash or self-pay pricing data for four cities: Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, San Antonio and Austin. You can find this data by using the search tools at the top of each page of our site.

We collected these prices in anticipation of a Texas partnership, but the partnership eventually did not materialize. The prices are somewhat dated. We did not remove them from the database because they are still useful: While not current, they reinforce the knowledge that prices in a given metro area can vary by a factor of as little as 3 or as much as 20, and people in search of procedures would do well to shop around.

Also, the current wave of mergers and acquisitions suggests that any attempt to keep current a list of prices is challenging at best, doomed at worst.

Our partnerships and their impact

Our New Orleans partnership established a new level of impact. We heard from thousands and thousands of people via our software, through email and voicemail, and in comments on our stories and on our social media accounts.

Our work was instrumental in passing consumer protection legislation in Louisiana, legislation that had stalled in the Legislature for 10 years.

We also won multiple prizes — the Society of Professional Journalists national public service gold medal for network news for our CBS partnership; an Edward R. Murrow national award, and a Society for Professional Journalists national public service gold medal for small markets with WVUE Fox 8 Live and Nola.com I The Times-Picayune.

We were finalists for the prestigious Peabody Award — one of 60 nationwide, along with prestigious organizations like PBS, CBS, the BBC,  CNN, Netflix, The New York Times — and while we were not chosen one of the 30 finalists, we were honored to be in this company. Our work also won multiple local and regional awards — several regional Murrow awards, a Suncoast Emmy and multiple awards in Investigative/Public Service and Public Affairs categories at the Louisiana-Mississippi Associated Press Broadcasters and Media Editors awards ceremony.

Here’s a Harvard Business Review piece about our work with our media partners. There’s some more info about us below. We’ve been featured on NPR and in USA Today, and our partner Lisa Aliferis from KQED wrote about our work in JAMA Internal Medicine, and it was accompanied by a positive editor’s note from Rita Redberg, the JAMA editor, among other great earned media. (Look at our press page for some citations.)

We also have been asked to testify to the California State Senate Health Committee on transparency and we were cited in a Stanford Health-Anthem Blue Cross contract dispute.

We were also asked to supply information to Covered California and the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Our partners in California won an SPJ award for innovation in journalism. They also presented at the NICAR-IRE and Association of Health Care Journalists conferences.

We have also been featured speakers at events including Politico Pro, the Department of Health and Human Services Datapalooza in Washington, the New York Ehealth Cooperative Patient Shark Tank (we won!) and Grantmakers in Health (for our demonstrated impact) and at other events and locations.

Our founder’s TED talk was featured on the front page of the TED.com website and has collected more than 2 million views.

Jeanne Pinder  is the founder and CEO of ClearHealthCosts. She worked at The New York Times for almost 25 years as a reporter, editor and human resources executive, then volunteered for a buyout and founded...