Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

New rule requires health costs revealed up front

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Ricardo AlonsoZald­ivar of The Associated Press and by Shira Stein, Lydia Wheeler and John Tozzi of Bloomberg News.

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion Thursday finalized a requiremen­t for insurers to tell consumers up front the actual prices for common tests and procedures.

Insurance plans will also be required to make their in-network negotiated rates with doctors and allowable out-of-network rates available to the public, according to the multiagenc­y rule. They will be required to post their negotiated pharmaceut­ical prices and the historical net prices for all their covered drugs.

A major health insurance industry group said the regulation would have the opposite effect, raising premiums.

Most plans, including employer- based group health plans and health

“We need to keep pricing on the front end, not the back end.”

insurance issuers offering group and individual coverage, will be required to post the informatio­n.

The late- innings policy announceme­nt ahead of Election Day comes as President Donald Trump has been hammered on health care by Democratic challenger Joe Biden for the administra­tion’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic and its unrelentin­g efforts to overturn the Affordable Care Act, the 2010 law providing coverage to more than 20 million people.

A related Trump administra­tion price disclosure requiremen­t applying to hospitals is facing a federal lawsuit from the industry, alleging coercion and interferen­ce with business practices.

The idea behind the new regulation­s on insurers is to empower patients to become better consumers of health care and help drive down costs.

But the requiremen­ts would take effect gradually over a four-year period, and patients face a considerab­le learning curve to make cost- versus- quality decisions about procedures like knee replacemen­ts or hernia repairs. Add to that political uncertaint­y about the policy’s survival if Trump doesn’t get reelected, and the whole effort is running into skepticism.

Administra­tion officials are adamant the changes will stand, arguing that the goal of price transparen­cy transcends political partisansh­ip.

“It will be impossible to walk backwards on this,” Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said. “How do you fight transparen­cy on prices? How do you actually articulate the argument that you should conceal what something costs from the person trying to purchase it?”

—Seema Verma, head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

WILL BACKFIRE, FIRMS SAY

Insurance companies contend that the rules will boomerang economical­ly, by undercutti­ng their ability to bargain with hospitals, drug companies, doctors and other industry players. Providers now accepting discounted rates will press to get paid more once they see what their upper- end competitor­s are getting.

“The final rule will work to reduce competitio­n and push health care prices higher — not lower — for American families, patients, and taxpayers,” Matt Eyles, president of America’s Health Insurance Plans, said in a statement. “This is precisely the opposite of what Americans want in their health care.”

The new rules are being issued jointly by Health and Human Services, the Labor Department and the Treasury, which share jurisdicti­on over health insurance plans. They would:

■ Starting in 2022, require insurers to make available data files on the costs of various procedures, allowing technology companies to design apps that let patients see costs not only under their own plan but other insurers’ plans as well.

■ Starting in 2023, require insurers to make available to their policyhold­ers costsharin­g details on 500 specific services, medical equipment and other items, as called for by the government.

■ Starting in 2024, require insurers to make cost-sharing informatio­n available on all the services and goods they cover.

INSURANCE SHOPPING ONLINE

Patients would use an online shopping tool from their plan to see the negotiated rate between their doctor and the insurer, as well as an out-of-pocket cost estimate for procedures, drugs, durable medical equipment and any other item or service they may need.

“We need to keep pricing on the front end, not the back end,” said Seema Verma, head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “We have seen in every single industry that when this informatio­n is provided to consumers, it creates a new era of consumeris­m.”

The issue of health care price transparen­cy started attracting more attention under the Obama administra­tion, as then-Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius oversaw the disclosure of list prices charged by hospitals. The Trump administra­tion’s initiative drills down more deeply to try to get at the prices actually paid by insurers.

“Transparen­cy is here to stay, even in a Biden administra­tion,” said Kavita Patel, a former Obama White House health policy adviser. However, she said she believes Biden would seek to reshape the Trump rules to focus more on quality, helping patients find high-value providers and services.

The finalized rule is similar to a Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services rule that requires some 6,000 U.S. hospitals to disclose their negotiated rates with insurers for 300 common medical services, along with the discounted cash price they’re willing to accept for those procedures.

The American Hospital Associatio­n led the lawsuit that industry groups and hospital systems brought against the regulation that’s set to take effect Jan. 1.

A federal district judge in Washington, D.C., upheld the rule in June. The hospital groups appealed, arguing the rule unlawfully expanded the definition of “standard charges” that a hospital must disclose under a provision in the Affordable Care Act to include these negotiated rates.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has yet to issue a ruling in the case.

 ?? (AP/Alex Brandon) ?? U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar speaks during a media briefing in August at the White House. Azar said Thursday that the Trump administra­tion has finalized requiremen­ts for insurers to post patients’ out-of-pocket costs on the internet.
(AP/Alex Brandon) U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar speaks during a media briefing in August at the White House. Azar said Thursday that the Trump administra­tion has finalized requiremen­ts for insurers to post patients’ out-of-pocket costs on the internet.

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