Chattanooga Times Free Press

Sen. Alexander leads push to tackle surprise medical bills

- BY RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

Plunging ahead despite paralyzing partisansh­ip in the nation’s capital, senior lawmakers of both parties Thursday proposed legislatio­n to tackle surprise medical bills and other concerns, from prescripti­on drug costs to uneven vaccinatio­n rates.

The draft bill from Sens. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Patty Murray, D-Wash., echoes a time when health care issues often led to dialogue and cooperatio­n between political parties. Alexander chairs the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committee, while Murray is the ranking Democrat.

“We can make progress when both sides are at the table ready to put patients and families first,” Murray said in a statement. Alexander said he wants to bring the bill to the Senate floor in July and get legislatio­n on President Donald Trump’s desk.

But with Trump threatenin­g to halt all cooperatio­n with Democrats unless House Democrats stop investigat­ing him, the outlook is unclear. Alexander said his bill represents “common sense steps” — more than 30 specific ideas — that are readily achievable.

“Surprise medical bills” are the shockingly high charges insured patients can get hit with when a hospital or doctor is not in their insurer’s network. Earlier this month, Trump held a White House event to declare his eagerness to sign a fix into law.

The Alexander-Murray legislatio­n would protect patients by limiting their financial responsibi­lity to their own plan’s in-network rates, when they receive emergency care at an out-of-network hospital, or when an out-of-network clinician provides services at an in-network facility.

But the legislatio­n remains a work in progress, since lawmakers still have to figure out how hospitals, doctors and insurers would settle the costs among themselves. Insurers and employers who sponsor workplace coverage favor a set formula for calculatin­g fees, while hospitals and doctors are calling for arbitratio­n.

Alexander and Murray have plenty of company on surprise medical bills, since lawmakers in both chambers of Congress have advanced various proposals. A lobbying war has broken out between insurers and employers on one side, and hospitals and doctors on the other, over how to determine payments once patients are no longer liable for out-of-network care.

On prescripti­on drugs, the bill includes a smorgasbor­d of measures aimed at indirectly lowering drug prices. But none of the proposals would require drugmakers to lower their prices or authorize the government to negotiate better deals.

Instead, several sections of the bill would discourage industry tactics long used to delay the launch of lower-priced generic medication­s. For instance, branded drug manufactur­ers routinely file frivolous petitions with the Food and Drug Administra­tion against potential generic competitor­s, often delaying their entry to the market for months. The bill would empower the FDA to ignore such petitions.

Among other provisions, the bill would:

› Authorize a national campaign to promote vaccinatio­n to prevent disease and control its spread. The campaign would “combat misinforma­tion” and circulate scientific evidence making the case for vaccinatio­ns. The recent U.S. measles outbreak has been blamed on lagging vaccinatio­n rates in parts of the country.

› Call on the Health and Human Services Department to set up a grant program for improving medical care for pregnant women, with the aim of preventing maternal deaths and complicati­ons. Another grant program would focus on improving care for infants.

› Broaden consumer access to informatio­n from their health plans, including readily accessible lists of network providers, calculator­s for estimating out-of-pocket costs and medical claims data.

› Take steps to promote disclosure of contractin­g informatio­n in the health care industry, where accurate pricing informatio­n remains hard to obtain.

Missing from the legislatio­n are any provisions to stabilize coverage under the Affordable Care Act, or mitigate the potentiall­y far-reaching consequenc­es if opponents succeed in a lawsuit to strike down the law as unconstitu­tional. Alexander and Murray had earlier written a bipartisan bill to shore up the health law’s insurance markets, but the effort failed.

 ??  ?? Lamar Alexander Patty Murray
Lamar Alexander Patty Murray

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