Some
legal experts say contract law could provide consumers another avenue to
challenge unexpected hospital bills.
By Julie
Appleby DECEMBER 19, 2018
Joaquin
Lopez had emergency gallbladder surgery after rushing to an ER last year. He
has been haggling with Baptist Memorial Hospital in Memphis over what he owes
ever since.
The
37-year-old college professor was hit with a nearly $8,000 bill from the
out-of-network hospital — that was after the $11,000 he and his insurer had
already paid.
Consumers
are increasingly vulnerable to such so-called balance bills, which represent
the difference between what insurers pay and hospitals’ list prices. List
prices can be several times higher than what they accept from Medicare or
in-network insurers.
Congress
is considering bipartisan legislation to
limit balance billing. But some legal scholars say that patients should already
be protected against some of the highest, surprise charges under long-standing
conventions of contract law.
That’s
because contract law rests on the centuries-old concept of “mutual assent,” in
which both sides agree to a price before services are rendered, said Barak
Richman, a law professor at Duke University.
Thus,
many states require, and consumers expect, written estimates for a range of
services before the work is done — whether by mechanics and plumbers or lawyers
and financial planners.
But
patients rarely know upfront how much their medical care will cost, and
hospitals generally provide little or no information.
While
consumers are obligated to pay something, the question is how much? Hospitals
generally bill out-of-network care at list prices, their highest charges.
Without
an explicit price upfront, contract law would require medical providers to
charge only “average or market prices,” Richman said.
In
several recent cases, for example in New York and Colorado, courts have
stepped in to mediate cases where a patient received a big balance bill from an
out-of-network provider. They ordered hospitals to accept amounts far closer to
what they agree to from in-network private insurers or Medicare.
“This
is the amount they are legally entitled to collect,” said Richman.
Lopez’s
bill came after he sought help at the emergency room following excruciating
abdominal pain. Sent home with pain medication, he awoke hours later to a phone
call from the hospital: Come back! A review of his tests showed he needed
surgery. He didn’t stop to ask if the hospital was in his network, or for a
cost estimate.
So, in
an example like that, is there mutual assent?
Hospitals say yes, that
signed admission forms, which include a promise to pay, constitute mutual
assent, even if there was no price disclosed.
No,
counters Richman. If a tax preparer provided no upfront estimate, he could not
suddenly bill a client for $10,000 if the going rate for the service was $1,000
or less. The higher fee would never hold up in court of law, since there was no
“mutual assent” about price.
But
what, if anything, should Lopez offer to pay? What is reasonable or average in
a system where the price of a hip replacement can range from $15,000 to
$150,000, or a blood test can be $5 to $500?
Based
on the hospital’s list prices, Lopez’s bill came to nearly $21,000. Insurer
Cigna, using a formula it said is similar to what Medicare uses, said the
maximum it would cover was $11,160. It paid 80 percent of that lower amount,
and Lopez paid the remainder. Baptist hospital is billing Lopez for nearly $8,000
more, saying it wants the full charges.
“I’m an
economist,” said Lopez, who teaches at the University of Memphis. “I understand
how abusive these practices are. There is not a single market price.”
Indeed.
Healthcare Bluebook, a consumer website that uses claims data to estimate costs
, shows gall bladder surgery in Memphis costs as little as $14,000, but could
be tens of thousands more, with a “fair price” of about $18,000 — which is
generally less than full billed charges, but more than in-network insurers
would pay.
That
complexity — and the cost of hiring an attorney — have made legal challenges to
medical bills on the basis of contract law relatively scarce.
Also,
“it’s not a well-settled area of the law,” said Hall.
Even
though hospitals have lost some cases, their arguments have also found
traction.
The Virginia Supreme Court last
year ruled in favor of a hospital, saying admission paperwork patient Glenn
Dennis signed in the emergency room was a valid contract. The hospital had sued
him over an $84,000 bill for his out-of-network care.
Still,
the court left open the key question of just how much of that Dennis owed,
sending that back to a lower court. That court previously ruled that Dennis
owed only about $500 on top of the $27,255 his health insurer had paid. That
reflected a discount the hospital commonly gave uninsured patients, the circuit
court judge wrote. The two sides are still working on a settlement.
For
those caught up in the disputes, determining a fair price is hard.
“That’s
where courts struggle, creating health care prices,” said Mark Hall, director
of the Health Law and Policy Program at Wake Forest Forest University, who
backs the contract law protection theory.
One way
is to look at what hospitals accept for in-network care from private insurers.
But hospitals generally object to releasing that, saying it’s a trade secret.
A
2017 Texas Supreme Court ruling has,
at least for now, broken through this position. It said that hospitals in some
legal disputes must disclose those in-network rates they allow in-network
insurers to pay.
“Hospitals
are really trying to prevent this sort of thing because they are uncomfortable
having someone ask them to justify [their charges],” said George Nation, a law
professor at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania, who filed a court brief in the
Texas case on behalf of the patient’s argument.
In
June, the hospital involved in the dispute asked for a rehearing, saying such
disclosure would weaken its bargaining power. Several other hospitals are
backing its request, illustrating the broad concern.
Lopez
has hired a lawyer to fight his bill.
Consumers
in some states might have
legal backup under balance-billing laws. But rules vary, often don’t apply to
all types of insurance and may cover only emergency medical treatment costs.
Tennessee’s
law, which went into effect in July, requires hospitals to notify patients of
estimated costs and that they could receive balance bills.
After
getting a balance bill, consumers should attempt to negotiate a reduced amount,
said Wendy Netter Epstein, a health law professor at DePaul University College
of Law. Online lookup tools like Healthcare Bluebook or Fair Health can provide estimates of
average costs for procedures.
Lopez
said he offered to pay 20 percent of the disputed amount, but it has not — so
far — been accepted.
Baptist
Memorial Hospital encourages patients to file appeals and, if a better offer is
made by the insurer, “we accept it and dismiss the patient’s balance,” said
David Elliott, vice president of managed care and CEO of Baptist Health
Services Group, in an emailed statement.
Lopez has
appealed twice to insurer Cigna to cover more of the bill —without success.
For
now, his lawyer has written to the hospital, disputing that Lopez owes more
than was already paid by the insurer. The letter said Lopez planned to avail
himself of any protection under state or federal law.
Julie
Appleby: jappleby@kff.org,
@Julie_Appleby
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