The Commercial Appeal

COVID-19 bill to end ‘surprise’ charges

Congress targets out-of-network charges

- Ricardo Alonso-zaldivar

WASHINGTON – People with private health insurance will see the nasty shock of “surprise” medical bills virtually gone, thanks to the coronaviru­s compromise passed by Congress.

The charges that can run from hundreds to tens of thousands of dollars come from doctors and hospitals that are outside the network of a patient’s health insurance plan. It’s estimated that about 1 in 5 emergency visits and 1 in 6 inpatient admissions will trigger a surprise bill.

Although lawmakers of both parties long agreed that the practice amounted to abusive billing, a lobbying war between doctors and insurers had thwarted a compromise.

“This has been a profoundly distressin­g pocketbook issue for families for years,” said Karen Pollitz, a health insurance expert with the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation.

The compromise would take patients and their families out of the financial crosshairs by limiting what they can be billed for out-of-network services to a fee that’s based on in-network charges. The amount consumers pay would get counted toward their innetwork annual deductible.

Insurers and service providers would submit their billing disputes to an independen­t dispute resolution process, which will follow certain guidelines. The main provisions of the legislatio­n would start Jan. 1, 2022.

“Keeping the consumer out of it and forcing the providers to be the ones to settle is a positive,” said Eagan Kemp, a policy expert with Public Citizen, a liberal advocacy group. Key elements of the legislatio­n would:

h Hold patients harmless from surprise bills stemming from emergency medical care. That would apply if the patient is seen at an out-of-network facility or is treated by an out-of-network clinician at an in-network hospital. Patients could only be billed based on their plan’s in-network rate.

h Protect patients admitted to an in-network hospital for a planned procedure when an out-of-network clinician gets involved. This can happen when a surgeon is called in to assist in the operating room, or if the anesthesio­logist on duty is not part of the patient’s plan.

h Generally require out-of-network service providers to give patients 72hour notice of their estimated charges. Patients would have to agree to receive out-of-network care for the hospital or doctor to then bill them.

h Bar air ambulance services from sending patients surprise bills for more than the in-network amount. Air ambulance charges are a bigger problem in states where patients have to travel long distances to get to the best hospitals.

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