Trump Administration Announces
Historic Price Transparency Requirements to Increase Competition and Lower
Healthcare Costs for All Americans
Two regulations advance the Trump Administration’s commitment to increasing
price transparency
As
directed by President Trump’s Executive
Order on Improving Price and Quality Transparency in American
Healthcare, today the Department of Health and Human Services is announcing
that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is issuing two
rules that take historic steps to increase price transparency to empower
patients and increase competition among all hospitals, group health plans
and health insurance issuers in the individual and group markets. One of
the rules is the Calendar Year (CY) 2020 Outpatient Prospective Payment
System (OPPS) & Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) Price Transparency
Requirements for Hospitals to Make Standard Charges Public Final Rule. The
second rule is the Transparency in Coverage Proposed Rule. Both the final
and proposed rules require that pricing information be made publicly
available.
“President
Trump has promised American patients ‘A+’ healthcare transparency, but
right now our system probably deserves an F on transparency. President
Trump is going to change that, with what will be revolutionary changes for
our healthcare system,” said HHS Secretary Alex Azar. “Today’s transparency
announcement may be a more significant change to American healthcare
markets than any other single thing we’ve done, by shining light on the
costs of our shadowy system and finally putting the American patient in
control.”
Consistent
with the Executive Order on price and quality transparency, the Trump
Administration is taking action toward making sure that insured and
uninsured Americans alike have the information necessary to get an accurate
estimate of the cost of the healthcare services they are seeking before
they receive care.
“Under
the status quo, healthcare prices are about as clear as mud to patients,”
said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Thanks to President Trump’s vision and
leadership, we are throwing open the shutters and bringing to light the
price of care for American consumers. Kept secret, these prices are simply
dollar amounts on a ledger; disclosed, they deliver fuel to the engines of
competition among hospitals and insurers. This final rule and the proposed
rule will bring forward the transparency we need to finally begin reducing
the overall healthcare costs. Today’s rules usher in a new era that upends
the status quo to empower patients and put them first.”
In
response to the Executive Order, the Department of Health and Human
Services, the Department of Labor, and the Department of the Treasury
(collectively, the Departments) are issuing a proposed rule, “Transparency
in Coverage” that would require most employer-based group health plans and
health insurance issuers offering group and individual coverage to disclose
price and cost-sharing information to participants, beneficiaries, and
enrollees up front. With this information, patients will have accurate
estimates of any out-of-pocket costs they must pay to meet their plan’s
deductible, co-pay, or co-insurance requirements. This will make
previously unavailable price information accessible to patients and other
stakeholders in a standardized way, allowing for easy comparisons.
If
finalized, the proposed Transparency in Coverage rule would require health
plans to:
- Give consumers real-time,
personalized access to cost-sharing information, including an estimate
of their cost-sharing liability for all covered healthcare items and
services, through an online tool that most group health plans and
health insurance issuers would be required to make available to all of
their members, and in paper form, at the consumer’s request. This
requirement would empower consumers to shop and compare costs between
specific providers before receiving care.
- Disclose on a public
website their negotiated rates for in-network providers and allowed
amounts paid for out-of-network providers. Making this information
available to the public is intended to drive innovation, support
informed, price-conscious decision-making, and promote competition in
the healthcare industry. Making this information public directly helps
the consumer, but, more importantly, creates new opportunities for
researchers, employers and other developers to build new tools to help
consumers.
The
proposed rule would also encourage health insurance issuers to offer new or
different plan designs that incentivize consumers to shop for services from
lower-cost, higher-value providers by allowing issuers to take credit for “shared
savings” payments in their medical loss ratio (MLR) calculations.
In
addition, the Administration is finalizing a rule that will require
hospitals to provide patients with clear, accessible information about
their “standard charges” for the items and services they provide, including
through the use of standardized data elements, making it easier to shop and
compare across hospitals, as well as mitigating surprises. The final rule
will require hospitals to make their standard charges public in two ways
beginning in 2021:
- Comprehensive
Machine-Readable File:
Hospitals will be required to make public all hospital standard
charges (including the gross charges, payer-specific negotiated
charges, the amount the hospital is willing to accept in cash from a patient,
and the minimum and maximum negotiated charges) for all items and
services on the Internet in a single data file that can be read by
other computer systems. The file must include additional information
such as common billing or accounting codes used by the hospital (such
as Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) codes) and a
description of the item or service to provide common elements for
consumers to compare standard charges from hospital to hospital.
- Display of Shoppable
Services in a Consumer-Friendly Manner: Hospitals will be required
to make public payer-specific negotiated charges, the amount the
hospital is willing to accept in cash from a patient for an item or
service, and the minimum and maximum negotiated charges for 300 common
shoppable services in a manner that is consumer-friendly and update
the information at least annually.
o Shoppable services are services that can be scheduled by
a healthcare consumer in advance such as x-rays, outpatient visits, imaging
and laboratory tests or bundled services like a cesarean delivery,
including pre- and post-delivery care.
o The requirements for the consumer-friendly file are that
the information must be made public in a prominent location online that is
easily accessible, without barriers, and it must also be searchable. Item
and service descriptions must be in ‘plain language’ and the shoppable
service charges must be displayed and grouped with charges for any
ancillary services the hospital customarily provides with the primary
shoppable service.
In
order to ensure that hospitals comply with the requirements, the final rule
provides CMS with new enforcement tools including monitoring, auditing,
corrective action plans, and the ability to impose civil monetary penalties
of $300 per day. In response to public comments, CMS is finalizing that the
effective date of the final rule will be January 1, 2021 to ensure that
hospitals have the time to be compliant with these policies.
For a
fact sheet on the Calendar Year (CY) 2020 Outpatient Prospective Payment
System (OPPS) & Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) Price Transparency
Requirements for Hospitals to Make Standard Charges Public final rule
(CMS-1717-F2), please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/cy-2020-hospital-outpatient-prospective-payment-system-opps-policy-changes-hospital-price
For a
fact sheet on the Transparency in Coverage Proposed Rule (CMS-9915-P),
please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/transparency-coverage-proposed-rule-cms-9915-p
The
final rule (CMS-1717-F2) can be viewed here: https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/cms-1717-f2.pdf
The
proposed rule (CMS‑9915‑P) can be viewed here: https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/cms-9915-p.pdf
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