By Rachel Bluth APRIL 2, 2019
One
point drew clear agreement Tuesday during a House subcommittee hearing: When it
comes to the problem of surprise medical bills, the solution must protect
patients — not demand that they be great negotiators.
“It is
the providers and insurers, not patients, who should bear the burden of
settling on a fair payment,” said Frederick Isasi, the executive director of
Families USA. He was one of the witnesses who testified before
the House Health, Employment, Labor and Pensions subcommittee of the Education
& Labor Committee.
Surprise,
or “balance,” bills happen when patients go to a hospital they think is in
their insurance network, but are then seen by a doctor or specialist who isn’t.
The patient is then on the hook for an often very high bill — sometimes
exceeding thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars.
Surprise
billing is one of the rare public policy problems that is both bipartisan and
in need of a federal solution. Around 60 percent of people are covered by
employer-sponsored insurance, which is regulated by the federal government, and
are not protected by the nearly two dozen state laws governing balance billing.
“We
have people on this committee that have done yeoman efforts to come up with
solutions in their own states,” said Rep. Tim Walberg (R-Mich.), the panel’s
ranking member. “I think we have a head start in understanding some of the
pitfalls to stay away from and some of the benefits we can go directly toward.”
Several
policy solutions have been introduced in Congress and discussed at the White House,
but the witnesses testifying before the panel were firm that any answer needed
to be worked out between key stakeholders — providers and insurers — instead of
forcing consumers to file complaints and
go through arbitration processes.
The
problem, according to testimony, needs to be solved at the root. Instead of
allowing a situation in which patients must negotiate a payment
plan after receiving a surprise bill, hospitals and insurers need to remove the
incentives for doctors to remain out-of-network.
Right now,
if doctors opt out of an insurance network, they can charge prices that are
“largely made up,” said Christen Linke Young, a fellow at
USC-Brookings Schaeffer Initiative for Health Policy.
“We
need to limit how much they can be paid in out-of-network scenarios to make it
less attractive,” Young said.
Experts
offered a few solutions, like capping how much providers can be paid if they
are out-of-network. Ilyse Schuman, senior vice president of health policy at
the American Benefits Council, suggested capping reimbursement for
out-of-network emergency services at 125% of what the physician would get from
Medicare.
Rep.
Phil Roe (R-Tenn.), an obstetrician, expressed concerns that tying payments to
Medicare would disadvantage rural communities like his, where Medicare
reimburses doctors less.
“We pay
our providers less and can keep less than 10% of nurses we train in the area
because we can’t pay them,” Roe said.
Though
Rep. Susan Wild (D-Pa.) acknowledged surprise billing is one problem that both
parties are motivated to solve, she was skeptical that a path forward was on
the horizon.
“The
solutions I’m hearing don’t sound workable in the context of our present
medical system,” Wild said.
“Isn’t
the real problem the fact that we’ve turned over our medical system to private
market forces?” she asked.
While price transparency is
often touted as the antidote to high medical bills, panelists were adamant that
more information alone is not enough to stop balance bills.
Patients
usually can’t shop around for an anesthesiologist, for instance, no matter how
much information they have.
“Notice
isn’t enough here; even if the consumer has perfect information, they can’t do
anything with that information,” Young testified. “They can’t go across town to
get their anesthesia and go back to the hospital.”
Rachel Bluth: rbluth@kff.org, @RachelHBluth
https://khn.org/news/fixing-surprise-medical-bill-problem-shouldnt-fall-to-consumers-panel-told/?utm_campaign=KFF-2019-The-Latest&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=71419396&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9njsjml4yJ-jAkPEGrloABoGAZeZ032snZU7khsgeBC0UHc08bsGSQ_MpUvUhTZVlFcUn7cE0gL6WzTR_Zx3qqFvye3Q&_hsmi=71419396
No comments:
Post a Comment