Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Surprise! A $52,112 helicopter trip

Virus patients face pile of medical bills once they go home

- By Sarah Kliff

An intubated coronaviru­s patient was declining rapidly when doctors decided to airlift her to a hospital with better critical care resources.

“It’s life or death,” the family of the 60-year-old woman recalled being told when it happened in April. “We have to transfer her now.”

The patientwas flownby helicopter from one Philadelph­ia hospital to another 20 miles away. She spent six weeks at the new hospital and survived. When she came home, a letter arrived: The air ambulance company said she owed $52,112 for the trip.

Last year, Congress abandoned its attempt to prevent surprise bills like this one, and coronaviru­s patients are now paying the price.

Bills submitted to The New York Times show that patients often face surprise charges from out-of-network doctors, ambulances and medical laboratori­es they did not pick or even realize were involved in their care.

The plan to ban these kinds of bills was popular and bipartisan, and it was backed by theWhiteHo­use. It fell apart at the eleventh hour after private-equity firms, which own many of the medical providers that deliver surprise bills, poured millions into advertisem­ents opposing the plan.

Committee chairs squabbled over jurisdicti­onal issues and postponed the issue. Then the pandemic struck.

The Pennsylvan­ia patient had no way of knowing that her helicopter, which transporte­d her between two in-network hospitals, did not have a contract with her health insurance plan. Nor could she have known that the air ambulance service, owned by a private-equity firm, faces multiple lawsuits billing tactics.

Her health plan, Independen­ce Blue Cross, initially said it would pay $7,539 of the bill, according to billing documents reviewed by The Times, but then rescinded the money. The patient, housebound because of lingering coronaviru­s symptoms, was leftwith the full amount.

“She was intubated and on a ventilator when her providers felt it was necessary that she be transferre­d,” said Leslie Pierce, a division chief at the Pennsylvan­ia Insurance Department, who handled the complaint that the patient submitted to the agency. “She had no decision in the selection process.”

About 450,000 Americans have been hospitaliz­ed with the coronaviru­s. Even for those covered by robust health insurance, hospitaliz­ation can generate significan­t medical bills. To understand the true cost of coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations, and the impact these medical bills have on patients, The Times has been inviting readers to share their bills.

The resulting database, which now includes more than 350 reader submission­s, shows that coronaviru­s patients are encounteri­ng the same surprise medical bills that have plagued the health system for decades.

While President Donald Trump told the country “not to worry” about the disease after his three-day coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ation, other survivors say the cost of care causes tremendous anxiety at a moment when theywant to focus on recovery.

Some patients report feeling overwhelme­d by the pile of bills that greet them at home. One-third of hospitaliz­ed coronaviru­s patients reported an altered mental state after contractin­g the disease, according to a study examining neurologic­al symptoms. Many patients struggle to do basic tasks, such as cook or pay bills.

Surprise medical bills happen when patients receive over its care from an out-ofnetwork provider they did not choose. These charges are common in certain corners of the health system like the emergency room, where 20% of patients are vulnerable to surpriseme­dical bills.

The bills are especially pervasive after ambulance trips: One recent study found that asmany as 71% of those rides could result in surprise, out-of-network bills.

“We were shocked to see that,” said Dr. Karan Chhabra, a surgical resident at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the lead author of the study.

After failing to pass comprehens­ive billing reform, Congress tried in relief packages passed this spring to shield coronaviru­s patients from surprise charges. It set up a $175 billion provider relief fund to aid hospitals and doctors on the front lines of battling coronaviru­s.

As a condition of accepting those funds, medical providers agreed not to send surprise medical bills to their patients.

Many health insurers have promised to cover plan members’ coronaviru­s hospital stays in full, another effort to hold patients harmless.

But these protection­s leave significan­t gaps, as patients are beginning to find. While many hospitals and doctors received provider relief funds, a number of medical laboratori­es and ambulance services did not. That leaves those providers free to bill however they’d like.

Insurers’ policies that cover coronaviru­s hospital stays, meanwhile, sometimes do not include the ambulance ride it took to get there — or follow-up care to treat long-term symptoms.

“The government is telling people if you have coronaviru­s, you cannot get surprise-billed,” Chhabra said. “It’s incredibly counterpro­ductive if people cannot trust the policies meant to protect them when they’re getting care for this illness.”

 ?? ANDREWBURT­ON/THE NEWYORK TIMES ?? Air ambulance charges are often the most costly type of surprise medical bills. Above, an air ambulance above Beaumont Baptist Hospital in Texas.
ANDREWBURT­ON/THE NEWYORK TIMES Air ambulance charges are often the most costly type of surprise medical bills. Above, an air ambulance above Beaumont Baptist Hospital in Texas.

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