Walker County Messenger

House committee passes surprise billing measure

- By Dave Williams

standing,” Rep. Lee Hawkins, R-Gainesvill­e, chief sponsor of the bill, told members of the House Special Committee on Access to Quality Health Care. “We’re going to end that misunderst­anding.”

House Bill 888 would require insurance companies to pay out-of-network physicians either a “contracted amount” based on rates charged in 2017 for various procedures, or a higher charge that the insurer proposes.

Disagreeme­nts between the insurer and provider would prompt an arbitratio­n process overseen by the state Department of Insurance, which would contract with outside private arbitratio­n companies to decide the final bill.

On Tuesday, Feb. 18, consumer advocates and lobbyists representi­ng hospitals and health-insurance companies spoke out in support of the legislatio­n.

“It takes Georgia patients out of disputes between insurance companies and medical providers,” said Liz Coyle, executive director of Georgia Watch, a consumer organizati­on based in Atlanta.

But representa­tives of physician groups raised concerns that the bill would cover not only emergency services provided outside of a patient’s network but non-emergency procedures for which a patient could prepare ahead of time.

“We understand the need to protect consumers,” said Victor Moldovan, a lawyer representi­ng the Independen­t Doctors Associatio­n of Georgia. “But what this bill does … is take the fangs out of the ability of doctors to negotiate their rates.”

Mary Shea Ross-Smith, a lobbyist for the Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Georgia, said she’s concerned the bill would not apply the ban on surprise, or “balance,” billing to patients forced to go to a non-network medical facility for treatment in an emergency.

“In that situation, that member should not be balance billed,” she said.

But Hawkins said most patients hit with a surprise bill have gone to an in-network facility only to be charged for services provided by an out-ofnetwork specialist. He suggested addressing that issue now in order not to further complicate the legislatio­n and dealing with services provided at out-of-network facilities later.

An identical bill is pending in the Georgia Senate. The Senate bill, sponsored by Sen. Chuck Hufstetler, R-Rome, was expected to go before the Senate Health and Human Services Committee on Wednesday, Feb. 19.

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