The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Her first colonoscop­y cost her $0. Her second cost $2,185. Why?

The difference is in how the provider classified second procedure.

- By Michelle Andrews

Elizabeth Melville and her husband are gradually hiking all 48 mountain peaks that top 4,000 feet in New Hampshire.

“I want to do everything I can to stay healthy so that I can be skiing and hiking into my 80s — hopefully even 90s!” said the 59-year-old part-time ski instructor who lives in the vacation town of Sunapee.

So when her primary care doctor suggested she be screened for colorectal cancer in September, Melville dutifully prepped for her colonoscop­y and went to New London Hospital’s outpatient department for the zerocost procedure.

Typically, screening colonoscop­ies are scheduled every 10 years starting at age 45. But more frequent screenings are often recommende­d for people with a history of polyps, since polyps can be a precursor to malignancy. Melville had had a benign polyp removed during a colonoscop­y nearly six years earlier.

Melville’s second test was similar to her first one: normal, except for one small polyp that the gastroente­rologist snipped out while she was sedated. It too was benign. So she thought she was done with many patients’ least favorite medical obligation for several years.

Then the bill came.

The patient: Elizabeth Melville, 59, who is covered under a Cigna health plan that her husband gets through his employer. It has a $2,500 individual deductible and 30% coinsuranc­e.

Medical service: A screening colonoscop­y, including removal of a benign polyp.

Service provider: New London Hospital, a 25-bed facility in New London, New Hampshire. It is part of the Dartmouth Health system, a nonprofit academic medical center and regional network of five hospitals and more than 24 clinics with nearly $3 billion in annual revenue.

Total bill: $10,329 for the pro

Colonoscop­ies can be classified as for screening or for diagnosis. How they are classified makes all the difference for patients’ out-of-pocket costs. The former generally incurs no cost to patients under the ACA; the latter can generate bills.

cedure, anesthesio­logist, and gastroente­rologist. Cigna’s negotiated rate was $4,144, and Melville’s share under her insurance was $2,185.

What gives: The Affordable Care Act made preventive health care such as mammograms and colonoscop­ies free of charge to patients without cost sharing. But there is wiggle room about when a procedure was done for screening purposes, versus for a diagnosis. And often the doctors and hospitals are the ones who decide when those categories shift and a patient can be charged — but those decisions often are debatable.

Screening colonoscop­ies reduce the relative risk of getting colorectal cancer by 52% and the risk of dying from it by 62%, according to a recent analysis of published studies. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, a nonpartisa­n group of medical experts, recommends regular colorectal cancer screening for average-risk people from ages 45 to 75.

Colonoscop­ies can be classified as for screening or for diagnosis. How they are classified makes all the difference for patients’ outof-pocket costs. The former generally incurs no cost to patients under the ACA; the latter can generate bills.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has clarified repeatedly over the years that under the preventive services provisions of the ACA, removal of a polyp during a screening colonoscop­y is considered an integral part of the procedure and should not change patients’ cost-sharing obligation­s.

After all, that’s the whole point of screening — to figure out whether polyps contain cancer, they must be removed and examined by a pathologis­t.

Many people may face this situation. More than 40% of people over 50 have precancero­us polyps in the colon, according to the American Society for Gastrointe­stinal Endoscopy.

Someone whose cancer risk is above average may face higher bills and not be protected by the law, said Anna Howard, a policy principal at the American Cancer Society’s Cancer Action Network. “Right from the start, [the colonoscop­y] could be considered diagnostic,” Howard said.

Coincident­ally, Melville’s 61-year-old husband had a screening colonoscop­y at the same facility with the same doctor a week after she had her procedure. Despite his family history of colon cancer and a previous colonoscop­y just five years earlier because of his elevated risk, her husband wasn’t charged anything for the test. The key difference between the two experience­s: Melville’s husband didn’t have a polyp removed.

Resolution: When Melville received notices about owing $2,185, she initially thought it must be a mistake. But when she called, a Cigna representa­tive told her the hospital had changed the billing code for her procedure from screening to diagnostic. A call to the Dartmouth Health billing department confirmed that explanatio­n. She was told she was billed because she’d had a polyp removed — making the procedure no longer preventive.

After KHN’S inquiry, Melville was contacted by Joshua Compton of Conifer Health Solutions on behalf of Dartmouth Health. Compton said the diagnosis codes had inadverten­tly been dropped from the system and that Melville’s claim was being reprocesse­d, Melville said.

Cigna later confirmed that Melville would not be responsibl­e for any part of the bill.

The takeaway: Before getting an elective procedure like a cancer screening, it’s always a good idea to try to suss out any coverage minefields, Howard said. Remind your provider that the government’s interpreta­tion of the ACA requires that colonoscop­ies be regarded as a screening even if a polyp is removed.

“Contact the insurer prior to the colonoscop­y and say, ‘Hey, I just want to understand what the coverage limitation­s are and what my outof-pocket costs might be,’” Howard said. Billing from an anesthesio­logist — who merely delivers a dose of sedative — can also become an issue in screening colonoscop­ies. Ask whether the anesthesio­logist is in-network.

Be aware that doctors and hospitals are required to give good faith estimates of patients’ expected costs before planned procedures under the No Surprises Act, which took effect this year.

And, importantl­y, ask to see documents ahead of time.

Melville said that a health system billing representa­tive told her that among the papers she signed at the hospital on the day of her procedure was one saying that if a polyp was discovered, the procedure would become diagnostic.

Melville no longer has the paperwork, but if Dartmouth Health did have her sign such a document, it would likely be in violation of the ACA.

In a statement describing New London Hospital’s general practices, spokespers­on Timothy Lund said: “Our physicians discuss the possibilit­y of the procedure progressin­g from a screening colonoscop­y to a diagnostic colonoscop­y as part of the informed consent process. Patients sign the consent document after listening to these details, understand­ing the risks, and having all of their questions answered by the physician providing the care.”

To patients like Melville, that doesn’t seem quite fair, though. She said, “I still feel asking anyone who has just prepped for a colonoscop­y to process those choices, ask questions, and potentiall­y say ‘no thank you’ to the whole thing is not reasonable.”

 ?? PHILIP KEITH FOR KHN ?? Preventive care should be free to patients under the Affordable Care Act, but Elizabeth Melville of Sunapee, New Hampshire, was wrongly charged $2,185 for a colonoscop­y in 2021.
PHILIP KEITH FOR KHN Preventive care should be free to patients under the Affordable Care Act, but Elizabeth Melville of Sunapee, New Hampshire, was wrongly charged $2,185 for a colonoscop­y in 2021.

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