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Showing Original Post only (View all)Tucked into the relief bill: A BAN on most "surprise medical bills." [View all]
It took many years, blocked by above all Republicans serving special interests, but it's happening!
Surprise Medical Bills Cost Americans Millions. Congress Is Finally Set to Ban Most of Them.
Surprise bills happen when an out-of-network provider is unexpectedly involved in a patients care. Patients go to a hospital that accepts their insurance, for example, but get treated there by an emergency room physician who doesnt. Such doctors often bill those patients for large fees, far higher than what health plans typically pay.
Language included in the $900 billion spending deal reached Sunday night and headed for final passage on Monday will make those bills illegal. Instead of charging patients, health providers will now have to work with insurers to settle on a fair price. The new changes will take effect in 2022, and will apply to doctors, hospitals and air ambulances, though not ground ambulances.
Academic researchers have found that millions of Americans receive these types of surprise bills each year, with as many as one in five emergency room visits resulting in such a charge. The bills most commonly come from health providers that patients are not able to select, such as emergency room physicians, anesthesiologists and ambulances. The average surprise charge for an emergency room visit is just above $600, but patients have received bills larger than $100,000 from out-of-network providers they did not select.
Some private-equity firms have turned this kind of billing into a robust business model, buying emergency room doctor groups and moving the providers out of network so they could bill larger fees.
Among the major consumer problems in the fiendishly complex health system, surprise billing was the rare Washington issue that both parties could get behind. Health committee leaders have been engaged on the issue for years, as has the White House. President-elect Joe Biden included the proposal in his campaign health care agenda. It had the backing of many prominent and powerful legislators, including Senator Lamar Alexander, Republican of Tennessee and the retiring chairman of the Senate health committee. A survey published Friday by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that 80 percent of adults want the practice banned. More than a dozen states, including Texas and California, have passed bans of their own on surprise billing.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/20/upshot/surprise-medical-bills-congress-ban.html
Surprise bills happen when an out-of-network provider is unexpectedly involved in a patients care. Patients go to a hospital that accepts their insurance, for example, but get treated there by an emergency room physician who doesnt. Such doctors often bill those patients for large fees, far higher than what health plans typically pay.
Language included in the $900 billion spending deal reached Sunday night and headed for final passage on Monday will make those bills illegal. Instead of charging patients, health providers will now have to work with insurers to settle on a fair price. The new changes will take effect in 2022, and will apply to doctors, hospitals and air ambulances, though not ground ambulances.
Academic researchers have found that millions of Americans receive these types of surprise bills each year, with as many as one in five emergency room visits resulting in such a charge. The bills most commonly come from health providers that patients are not able to select, such as emergency room physicians, anesthesiologists and ambulances. The average surprise charge for an emergency room visit is just above $600, but patients have received bills larger than $100,000 from out-of-network providers they did not select.
Some private-equity firms have turned this kind of billing into a robust business model, buying emergency room doctor groups and moving the providers out of network so they could bill larger fees.
Among the major consumer problems in the fiendishly complex health system, surprise billing was the rare Washington issue that both parties could get behind. Health committee leaders have been engaged on the issue for years, as has the White House. President-elect Joe Biden included the proposal in his campaign health care agenda. It had the backing of many prominent and powerful legislators, including Senator Lamar Alexander, Republican of Tennessee and the retiring chairman of the Senate health committee. A survey published Friday by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that 80 percent of adults want the practice banned. More than a dozen states, including Texas and California, have passed bans of their own on surprise billing.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/20/upshot/surprise-medical-bills-congress-ban.html
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Tucked into the relief bill: A BAN on most "surprise medical bills." [View all]
Hortensis
Dec 2020
OP
That's why people who are experiencing emergencies beg bystanders not to call 911
IronLionZion
Dec 2020
#24
After my husband had his stroke 4 years ago we received a bill for 200,000 in out of network costs.
onecaliberal
Dec 2020
#25
I was once billed for an out of network piece of medical equipment used in a procedure.
ehrnst
Dec 2020
#30
You hear that Swedish-American in Rockford??? No more surprise bills from your "ER" team
AllyCat
Dec 2020
#39
That 'out of network' bullshit needs to be eliminated completely. Get ReTHUGS out ...
Hermit-The-Prog
Dec 2020
#45