Modern Healthcare

Judge blocks California law on dialysis clinics

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A federal judge blocked enforcemen­t of a California law aimed at preventing increased billing costs at dialysis clinics.

There is “a dire public interest” in granting a preliminar­y injunction that would bar enforcemen­t for months while a lawsuit against it proceeds through the courts, District Judge David Carter said.

If Assembly Bill 290 is permitted to take effect before it is reviewed, “thousands of California HIPP recipients— who number among the poorest and most medically vulnerable of all California­ns—may not be able to afford the dialysis treatments that keep them alive (or may be forced to dedicate all of their scant financial resources to medical care) and may face further delays in receiving a transplant,” Carter wrote.

HIPP refers to the Health Insurance Premium Program run by the not-forprofit American Kidney Fund. The program, paid for by dialysis clinics, covers insurance premiums for low-income patients who need dialysis.

California passed the law last year in an effort to deter dialysis clinics from encouragin­g patients to enroll in health plans that give them higher reimbursem­ent rates.

But the lawsuit contends the law will force the American Kidney Fund to close down the program, which helps about 3,700 patients in the state. The fund has said the law creates requiremen­ts that conflict with federal laws the program must follow.

Lawmakers contended that two large dialysis clinics in California were contributi­ng to the fund’s program, which in turn covered their patients’ premiums with private insurers that paid higher reimbursem­ent rates back to the clinics.

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