News & Updates

In cooperation with the American Ambulance Association, we and others have created a running compilation of local and national news stories relating to EMS delivery. Since January, 2021, over 1,900 news reports have been chronicled, with 49% highlighting the EMS staffing crisis, and 34% highlighting the funding crisis. Combined reports of staffing and/or funding account for 83% of the media reports! 96 reports cite EMS system closures/agencies departing communities, and 95% of the news articles reference staffing challenges, funding issues and response times.


Click below for an up to date list of these news stories, with links to the source documents.

Read Only - Media Log as of 4-8-24.xlsx

  • 15 Nov 2018 2:08 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)
    mHealth Intelligence Source Article | Comments Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    Ohio Hospital Using Telehealth to Tackle 911 Calls, ER Overcrowding

    Atrium Medical Center is partnering with the local fire department to launch a telehealth service aimed at local residents who frequently dial 911. The community paramedicine program is one of hundreds popping up across the country.

    By Eric Wicklund

    November 14, 2018

    https://mhealthintelligence.com/news/ohio-hospital-using-telehealth-to-tackle-911-calls-er-overcrowding

    An Ohio hospital is partnering with the local fire department and Miami University Oxford to launch a telehealth program aimed at the most frequent users of the 911 emergency system.

    Middletown-based Atrium Medical Center and the  Monroe Fire Department are launching a community paramedicine pilot program in the southwest Ohio community, with the goal of bringing connected health services to the region’s most frail and homebound residents.

    Also known as Mobile Integrated Health, the community paramedicine program involves sending healthcare providers – usually paramedics – on scheduled visits to the homes of people who most often call 911. The paramedics perform health and wellness checks using telemedicine equipment, check out the home for potential health hazards and educate residents on community health resources.

    Atrium officials say the program aims not only to reduce unnecessary ambulance calls and ER visits, but to improve the health and wellness of residents who have problems accessing regular healthcare services.

    As part of the program, Miami University students in social work programs will participate in the visits to chart their effectiveness. And the teams will carry a telemedicine kit developed by HNC Virtual Solutions.

    “Not only is the patient’s health and prognosis proactively improved through this revolutionary approach, but healthcare costs will be reduced, and the hospital’s existing healthcare delivery system will be enhanced by freeing up further resources to respond to more significant medical emergencies,” Julian Shaya, the company’s executive vice president, said in a press release. “This virtual solutions tool is a game changer for healthcare.”

    As of mid-2017, some 260 EMS programs across the country were using some sort of community paramedicine program, up from 100 programs in 2014, according to the National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians.

    “Having the opportunity to work with patients in the homes or work sites gives us the chance to be proactive instead of reactive,” Amie Allison, EMS Director for Montana’s Glacier County, said when the Glacier County Community Health Center launched its first-in-the state Integrated Mobile Health Service Program in early 2017.

    Earlier this year in New Mexico, American Medical Response unveiled its Mobile Integrated Healthcare (MIH) program in Valencia County following talks with Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Mexico and Molina Healthcare, which will be funding the program for its members.

    “Each assessment takes about an hour, but can vary in length,” Shelley Kleinfeld, AMR’s MIH supervisor for New Mexico, told the Valencia County News Bulletin.  “It differs from the assessments done traditionally by EMS providers dealing with acute injuries or illnesses. It focuses more on the whole well-being of the individual providing resources, services and education to the patients so they can better manage their health.”

    “When doing an assessment, we perform a risk assessment, needs assessment, fall assessment, and assess patients’ current needs,” she added. “Community paramedics know resources and services that are available in the community and can assist patients to better utilize them. During the needs assessment we can determine if patient is urgently in need of something, whether it’s a food box, water, medications and durable medical equipment. The community medic provider can than help the patients to quickly obtain those resources.”

    In Milwaukee, meanwhile, a program launched in 2015 by the Milwaukee Fire Department has reduced 911 calls from so-called “frequent flyers” by more than 50 percent over the past two years.

    One variation of the service, Houston’s Project Ethan (Emergency TeleHealth And Navigation), launched in 2014, sends first responders with telehealth equipment to the scene of a 911 call to assess the caller before deciding on transport.


  • 14 Nov 2018 9:57 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Learn what high performance, high value EMS means to MedStar Mobile Healthcare CEO and AIMHI President Doug Hooten.


  • 9 Nov 2018 10:05 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)
    Learn what high performance EMS means to AIMHI President-Elect Chip Decker of Richmond Ambulance Authority.



  • 8 Nov 2018 4:28 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Modern Healthcare Source Article | Comments courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    Mixed issues here – on one hand, limited access to primary care may exacerbate health issues in this population, potentially resulting in more acute care use, including ambulance.  On another hand, this may lead to an acceleration of Medicaid potentially paying for EMS-Based MIH services for prevention and patient navigation as a way to meet the Triple Aim®.

    The inclusion of non-emergency ambulance transportation has been undetermined in this policy.  Some officials have indicated it was not, but other indicated it did include non-emergency ambulance transportation.

    CMS is developing a rule that could curtail Medicaid transportation access

    By Virgil Dickson  | November 7, 2018

    https://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20181107/NEWS/181109932  

    The CMS is drafting a proposed rule that would make it easier for states to stop paying for non-emergent medical transportation for Medicaid beneficiaries, a move that could drastically cut into providers' revenue.

    While details of the potential rulemaking are scarce, a notice on the White House's Office of Management and Budget website said the regulation is projected to be released in May 2019.

    Just the suggestion that states could cut Medicaid transportation to medical appointments already has providers on edge. Annual Medicaid spending for these trips is around $3 billion, with roughly 103 million non-emergent medical trips each year, according to researchers.

    Medicaid enrollees already have a high no-show rate, and that could get worse if the CMS finalizes the rule, according to Dr. Theresa Rohr-Kirchgraber, a practicing pediatrician in Indianapolis and associate professor of clinical internal medicine and pediatrics at Indiana University.

    Many Medicaid enrollees lack access to vehicles due to their low incomes. There are also few public transportation options in Indiana, especially in rural areas, Rohr-Kirchgraber said.

    "Our feet are really held to the fire that we have high productivity in terms of the number of patients we have to see," she said. "We're the ones that are making the money for our institutions, and we can't we can't afford to keep our doors open if we can't get our patients in."

    Currently, states have to obtain a waiver from the CMS if they don't offer non-emergent transportation services. The Trump administration first floated the idea of changing that policy earlier this year in its 2019 budget proposals.

    Non-emergent transport to medical appointments has been a mandatory Medicaid benefit since the program's inception in 1965. 

    Iowa and Indiana are the only states with a waiver to opt out of providing transportation. Kentucky and Massachusetts have both asked the CMS for similar permission.

    It's unclear whether patients' health declines if Medicaid doesn't pay for rides to medical care. A February 2016 report from the Lewin Group said the impact of the transportation benefit waiver in Indiana has been minimal. Most beneficiaries could find other forms of transportation not paid for by Medicaid. Of the 286 beneficiaries interviewed, 11% cited lack of transportation as their reason for missing appointments. A report from Iowa had similar findings.

    But the Medical Transportation Access Coalition, a group made up of advocates, transportation providers and managed-care plans, noted that these waivers largely targeted adults who became eligible under Medicaid expansion and had not previously relied on the non-emergency transportation benefit.

    The group insists that making it easier for states to opt out of offering these services will harm access to care.

    Medicaid enrollees regularly use the benefit to get to dialysis, substance abuse treatments and chronic care visits for diabetes. A survey of Medicaid enrollees last summer by the coalition revealed that low-income patients found it critical to their day-to-day lives. 

    "Over half the trips taken today are for life-sustaining treatments," said Tricia Beckmann Faegre, an adviser to the coalition. "Some said that they would die or probably die if they didn't have transportation." Medicaid saved more than $40 million in hospitalization and other medical costs for patients receiving rides to dialysis and wound care treatments, according to a report by the coalition.

    It's unclear if the CMS has the authority to make this change to transportation benefits, according to Eliot Fishman, who oversaw 1115 waivers under the Obama administration and is now senior director of health policy at Families USA.

    "Making NEMT optional hasn't been tested in court," Fishman said. "If the administration goes in that direction, I expect there will be a legal challenge."

    The CMS does not comment on pending rulemakings, according to a spokesman.


  • 8 Nov 2018 7:56 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Longview News-Journal Source Article | Comments courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    Hats off to our Texas neighbors!

    -------------------------------------

    Longview starts pilot program to reduce EMS trips for high-volume patients

    By Jimmy Daniell Isaac

    Nov 7, 2018

    Emergency and mental health authorities are building toward a multiagency pilot program aimed at high-volume patients of local ambulance services.

    The program currently is unstaffed, but Community HealthCore is seeking grant funding with help from Longview health systems and the fire department’s Emergency Medical Services Division to pay for what is described as a proactive approach to patient care.

    The approach involves using in-home assessments to identify the needs of patients with the highest number of ambulance trips to local emergency rooms and other health centers — some who average more than 20 ambulance rides a month.

    “We had quite a few of those that use our ambulances quite often,” Longview EMS Section Chief Amy Dodgen said during a meeting Tuesday of the city’s EMS Advisory Board.

    The program targets people who call for emergency services with issues that can be served by a number of other agencies besides an ER visit, she said.

    EMS personnel will continue responding to 911 calls and transporting patients who need emergency room services, she said, but the goal of the program is to determine if the patient might, instead, need social, mental health or other services for issues not physical in nature. Those issues could be anxiety over where their next meal might come from or how they’ll pay a utility bill, which is why several social service agencies are involved in the program, Dodgen said.

    “We really want to solve their problems (and) what they’re needing, not just be a Band-Aid,” she said. “We have awesome people and awesome services in Longview. We’ve just got to connect people to them, and some people need assistance with that.”

    The EMS Advisory Board is made up of local hospital officials, health agents and first responders who advise the Longview City Council on matters dealing with EMS responsibilities such as financial and manpower investment priorities.

    Advocates hope to hear by the end of the year whether the Fort Worth-based Episcopal Health Foundation awards a grant to the local program — currently called the Gregg County Wellness Collaborative.

    Dodgen, a city staff liaison to the board, told members that a 270-page report of patients who used Longview ambulance services at least five times a month last year included one patient who took about 120 ambulance rides in one year.

    “That same patient is at 72 (trips) this year for 2018,” she said. “These patients, they’re the driving force behind the community health care medicine program that we’re wanting to start.”

    Community health care medicine programs have been tried in other cities and can be tailored to fit the Longview area’s specific needs, Dodgen said. It’s a partnership involving local hospitals and EMS agencies.

    “For Longview, the concept would be to take these high utilizers and go into their home with their permission and meet with them and see what we can do to mitigate their issues,” she said.

    A pilot program has been initiated with about five of the top ambulance users in Longview, including the highest user, who once averaged between 20 and 30 ambulance calls a month but has since reduced to about 10 times a month, Dodgen said, adding, “Although there were patient contacts with her, we didn’t transport her to the hospital as many times.”

    Advocates hope the program develops into a way to help patients who need assistance but do not need an emergency room visit.

    “Currently, EMS does not get paid if we don’t transport,” Dodgen said.


  • 8 Nov 2018 7:54 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)
    HealthAffairs Source Article | Comments courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    This is a nice summary of the possible healthcare implications post-election…

    What the 2018 Midterm Elections Means for Health Care

    Billy Wynne

    NOVEMBER 7, 2018

    Whatever you want to call the 2018 midterm elections – blue wave, rainbow wave, or purple puddle – one thing is clear: Democrats will control the House.

    That fundamental shift in the balance of power in Washington will have substantial implications for health care policymaking over the next two years. Based on a variety of signals they have been sending heading into Tuesday, we can make some safe assumptions about where congressional Democrats will focus in the 116th Congress. As importantly, there were a slew of health care-related decisions made at the state level, perhaps most notably four referenda on Medicaid expansion.

    In this post, I’ll take a look at which health care issues will come to the fore of the Federal agenda due to the outcome Tuesday, as well as state expansion decisions. And it should of course be noted that, in addition to positive changes Democrats are likely to pursue over the next two years, House control will allow them to block legislation they oppose, notably further GOP efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

    Drug Pricing

    Democrats have long signaled they consider pharmaceutical pricing to be one of their highest priorities, even after then-candidate Trump adopted the issue as part of his campaign platform and maintained his focus there through his tenure as President.

    While aiming to use the issue to drive a wedge between President Trump and congressional Republicans, who have historically opposed government action to set or influence prices, Democrats will also strive to distinguish themselves by going further on issues like direct government negotiation of Medicare Part D drug reimbursement.

    Relevant House committee chairs, perhaps especially likely Oversight and Investigations chair Elijah Cummings (D-MD), will also take a more aggressive tack in investigating manufacturers and other sector stakeholders for pricing increases and other practices. Democratic leaders believe it will be easier to achieve consensus on this issue than on more contentious issues like single payer (more detail below) among their diverse caucus, which will include dozens more members from “purple” districts as well as members on the left flank of the party  

    Preexisting Condition Protections

    If you live in a contested state or district, you have probably seen political ads relating to protecting patients with preexisting conditions. As long as a Republican-supported lawsuit seeking to repeal the ACA continues, Democrats believe they can leverage this issue to demonstrate the importance of the ACA and their broader health care platform.

    A three-legged stool serves under current law to protect patients with chronic conditions: (1) the ban on preexisting condition exclusions; (2) guaranteed issue; and (3) community rating. Democrats will likely seek to bolster these protections with measures to shore up the ACA exchange markets. In the same vein, they will likely strive to rescind Trump Administration proposals to expand association-based and short-term health plans, which put patients with higher medical costs at risk by disaggregating the market.  

    Opioids

    Congressional Democrats believe that there were some stones left unturned in this year’s opioid-related legislation, especially regarding funding for many of the programs it authorized. This is a priority for likely Ways & Means Committee Chair Richie Neal (D-MA) and could potentially be a source of bipartisan compromise.

    Medicare for All

    While this issue could become a bugaboo for old guard party leaders, the Democratic base will likely escalate its calls for action on Medicare for All now that the party has taken the House. Because the details of what various camps intend by this term are still vague (some believe it is tantamount to single payer, others view it as a gap-fill for existing uninsured, etc.), we will likely see a variety of competing proposals arise in the coming two years. Expect less bona fide committee action and more of a public debate aired via the presidential primary season that will kick off about, oh, right now.

    Surprise Bills

    The drug industry is not the only health care sector that can expect heightened scrutiny of their pricing practices now that Democrats control the people’s chamber. Most notably, the phenomenon of surprise bills (unexpected charges often stemming from a hospital visit) has risen as a salient issue for the public and thus a political winner for the party. Republicans have shown interest in this issue as well, so it could be another source of bipartisanship next year.

    Regulatory Oversight

    Democrats believe they are scoring well with the public, and certainly their base, every time they take on President Trump. The wide range of aggressive regulation (and deregulation) the Administration has pursued will be thoroughly investigated and challenged by Democratic committee leaders, especially administration efforts to dismantle the ACA and to test the legal bounds of the hospital site neutrality policy enacted in the Bipartisan Budget Act (BBA) of 2015.

    Extenders

    While it instituted permanent policies for Medicare physician payments and some other oft-renewed ‘extenders’, the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) of 2015 left a variety of policies in the perennial legislative limbo of needing to be repeatedly extended. While the policies in the Medicare space have dwindled to subterranean, though not necessarily cheap, affairs like the floor on geographic adjustments to physician payments, a slew of Medicaid-related and other policies are up for renewal in 2019.

    For example, Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) payments face a (previously delayed) cliff next year. That and the most expensive extender, ACA-initiated funding for community health centers, alone spring the cost of this package into the high single digit billions at least, driving a need for offsetting payment cuts and creating a vehicle for additional policy priorities.

    A likely addition to this discussion will be the fact that Medicare physician payments, per MACRA, are scheduled to flatline for 2020-2025 before beginning to increase again, albeit in divergent ways for doctors participating in the Merit-Based Incentive Payment Program (MIPs – 0.25 percent/year) and Advanced Alternative Payment Models (APMs – 0.75 percent/year). The AMA assuredly noticed this little wrinkle in the celebrated legislation but hundreds of thousands of doctors probably did not.

    Medicaid Expansion

    Of the variety of state-level health policy decisions voters made on Tuesday, perhaps the most significant related to Medicaid expansion. In there states where Republican leaders have blocked expansion under the ACA – Nebraska, Idaho, and Utah – voters endorsed it via public referenda. Increasing the Medicaid eligibility level in those three states to the ACA standard will bring coverage to approximately 300,000 people.

    Notably, voters in Montana rejected a proposal to continue funding the Medicaid expansion the state enacted temporarily in 2015 by an increase to the state’s tobacco tax. Their expansion is now scheduled to lapse in July 2019 if the legislature doesn’t act to maintain it. If they do not act, about 129,000 Montanans will lose Medicaid coverage.

    Finally, Democratic gubernatorial wins in Maine, Kansas, and Wisconsin will make Medicaid expansion more likely in those states.

    As they say, elections have consequences. While the Republican-controlled Senate and White House can block any Democratic priorities they oppose, the 2018 midterm elections assure a busy two years for health care stakeholders.


  • 1 Nov 2018 9:22 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Meet Matt Zavadsky, Chair of the AIMHI Education Committee.

  • 29 Oct 2018 9:09 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Congratulations to Sherry Willingham of Medstar Mobile Healthcare! Sherry was unanimously elected Chair of the AIMHI Reimbursement Committee on Friday. We thank her for her service!


  • 26 Oct 2018 9:31 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Source Article | Comments courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    A very logical step being taken by the Pennsylvania legislature! 

    And, one that is currently in place for payers such as Anthem and the Medicaid programs in Arizona and Georgia.  Additional payers are looking to implement similar programs.

    Decoupling payment from transport helps enhance patient outcomes, improve the patient’s experience of care, and significantly reduce the down-stream cost of care. 

    The misalignment of incentives of only reimbursing ambulance TRANSPORT to an ED is a significant cost driver.  In 2013, Health Affairs published a RAND study that determined that 12.9 – 16.2% of Medicare ambulance trips to the ED could have safely and effectively been managed in an alternate setting, and giving EMS flexibility to navigate patients could save the Medicare program up to $560 million annually.

    --------------------------

    Barrar's bill to reimburse ambulance companies heads to governor

    Digital First Media Oct 23, 2018

    WEST CHESTER—Legislation drafted by state Rep. Steve Barrar, R-160, that would require ambulance companies to be reimbursed for providing medical treatment, even if the patient is not transported to a hospital, was successfully voted on concurrence by the House.

    “The critical services provided by ambulance companies to Commonwealth citizens in their time of need will remain endangered, potentially to the point of extinction, if they aren’t reimbursed for their costs to render emergency care. My bill would entitle ambulance companies to payment when emergency medical responders treat and stabilize patients without a trip to the hospital,” Barrar said.

    Under current practice, EMS agencies can only be reimbursed by insurance companies if they transport the patient, even though time is spent, supplies are used and services are provided regardless of whether a transport takes place. This is a significant contributor to the financial challenges facing ambulance companies, especially when many are facing the grim reality of pending closures.

    House Bill 1013 would require reimbursement when transport to a facility does not take place as long as the following conditions are met: The Basic Life Support (BLS) or Advanced Life Support (ALS) unit must be dispatched by a county 911 center, and the EMS provider must have rendered emergency services even though the transport was declined.

    Also, the House approved legislation to close a loophole that PennDOT has been using to deny free emergency vehicle license plates to volunteer fire companies that also have paid employees.

    “Volunteer ambulance services all across the Commonwealth have been forced to pay for a plate that should have been given to them at no cost. It’s disappointing that PennDOT would take advantage of volunteer companies that save Pennsylvania so much money, but I’m pleased that I was able to influence the addition of an amendment on the bill to address this issue,” Barrar added.

    Both bills now advance to Gov. Tom Wolf for consideration.


  • 22 Oct 2018 8:03 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)
    Health Affairs Source Article | Comments Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    Interesting analysis of the various initiatives to address out of network medical billing. 

    Recall that Health Affairs provided another analysis of legislative initiatives published by in September 2018.  Clearly this issue has the attention of federal and state lawmakers. 

    Of note to our EMS family is that once again, Health Affairs calls on the various legislative efforts to include ambulance services in the legislative language.

    Analyzing Senator Hassan’s Binding Arbitration Approach To Preventing Surprise Medical Bills

    OCTOBER 18, 2018

    Loren AdlerPaul B. GinsburgMark HallErin TrishBenjamin Chartock

    Another Senate bill to address the scourge of surprise out-of-network medical bills was newly released on October 12, the No More Surprise Medical Bills Act of 2018, this time introduced by Senator Maggie Hassan (D-NH) and cosponsored by Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH). As we explained recently, surprise out-of-network medical bills can occur when a patient is unexpectedly seen by a physician who does not participate in their insurer’s provider network either in the course of emergency care or elective nonemergency care at an in-network facility, or when transported in an out-of-network ambulance.

    For enrollees in employer-sponsored health plans, the bill takes a largely similar approach to the recent bipartisan Senate bill, taking the patient out of the middle of the dispute and protecting patients in both emergency and nonemergency situations. The big difference is that, instead of prescribing a minimum payment rate from insurer to provider, Senator Hassan’s bill sets up a “binding arbitration” process to determine the appropriate provider payment rate in surprise out-of-network scenarios. And importantly, the arbiter would be instructed to consider Medicare and negotiated network rates, rather than artificially high provider charges, in making their rate determination.

    A companion bill introduced by Senator Shaheen would affect the individual market more broadly, capping the amount that out-of-network providers can charge in any situation (not just in situations we would define as a “surprise”) to enrollees in individual market plans (and also to uninsured patients). The bill allows states to choose among three options to set this out-of-network charge limit: 125 percent of Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) rates (with an allowance in rural areas to set payments up to 200 percent of Medicare rates), 80 percent of the “usual and customary rate” (UCR) based on provider’s billed charges, or the insurer’s in-network contracted rate for the service in question.

    While these provisions would not directly prohibit surprise bills in the individual market, they could considerably reduce the liability that patients potentially face in such situations by capping the amount that the out-of-network provider could charge. Moreover, by reducing the potential financial benefit to providers of remaining out-of-network, these provisions would likely also reduce the frequency of surprise bills by encouraging more providers to join insurers’ networks.

    The rest of this post focuses on the No More Surprise Medical Bills Act of 2018.

    No More Surprise Medical Bills Act Of 2018

    Senator Hassan’s legislation would protect group health plan enrollees from surprise out-of-network bills through the combination of:

    • Restricting the provider from charging the patient any more than what they would owe an in-network provider;
    • Requiring the insurer to count cost-sharing amounts for surprise out-of-network bills (which as just mentioned could not exceed in-network amounts) toward in-network deductibles and limits on out-of-pocket costs; and
    • Setting up a binding arbitration process to determine payment from insurer to provider in cases where they are unable to reach a resolution on their own.

    Provider Bills To Patients

    Hassan’s proposal would protect patients from surprise bills in both emergency situations and nonemergency situations at in-network facilities, when they are seen unexpectedly by an out-of-network clinician. An exception is allowed if the out-of-network provider provides an estimate of costs and obtains both written and verbal consent from the patient more than 24 hours in advance. If timely patient consent was not obtained, then the legislation’s surprise out-of-network billing protection automatically kicks in and the patient can be charged no more than what they would have paid if the service were performed by an in-network provider.

    Insurer Payment Of Providers

    Rather than prescribing the payment rate from insurer to provider for surprise out-of-network services, Hassan’s bill sets up a binding, “baseball-style” arbitration process to resolve payment disputes if the two parties are unable to agree on a payment amount. In this process, the insurer and provider each make a final offer and an independent arbiter contracted by government then chooses which of the two options it considers more reasonable. The theory behind this approach is that it incentivizes each side to make a reasonable offer or settle beforehand, because the arbiter is unlikely to choose an unrealistic offer. Making the results of these arbitration decisions public, as this bill would do (and as New Jersey’s new law does), further facilitates settlement before going to arbitration as both parties learn to anticipate what rate the arbiter would choose.

    The legislation provides guidance to the independent arbiter to consider the relevant Medicare payment rate and the local average in-network rate, in addition to the level of training of the physician and complexity of the service, when determining which offer to select. The bill makes no reference to provider billed charges, which tend to be extremely high and are largely untethered from market forces.

    Alternatively, Hassan’s legislation allows states to establish their own arbitration process, as New York, New Jersey, Illinois, and New Hampshire have done, as long as the state process is equally protective and the arbitration results are made public. Or states can elect a defined payment standard in place of the binding arbitration process, as long as it is no higher than 125 percent of the relevant Medicare rate or a comparable standard at the Secretary of Health and Human Services’ discretion.

    Senator Hassan’s bill improves options for states because currently they are unable to protect patients enrolled in self-insured employer health plans due to pre-emption by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA).

    Representative Michelle Lujan Grisham’s Fair Billing Act of 2017 also proposes a similar arbitration approach, as did our 2016 white paper, which dives into significantly more detail.

    It is necessary to determine a limit on payments to out-of-network providers to provide comprehensive protections against surprise billing to patients without giving providers the unfettered ability to charge whatever they want. The advantage of the binding arbitration approach is that it encourages each side to submit reasonable offers, allows for some flexibility in the rate chosen for differing circumstances, and gives the involved parties more input into what that rate should be than a rate chosen by policymakers or regulators. On the other hand, the binding arbitration approach adds administrative burden to the process, although this could be mitigated over time as the arbitration decisions are made public, which provides more guidance for settlement. Nonetheless, it’s not necessarily clear that the arbiter will always choose the “right” rate or be any better at selecting an appropriate rate than lawmakers.

    Yale Professors Zack Cooper and Fiona Scott Morton have recommended an alternative approach. They suggest requiring hospitals to pay emergency and ancillary physicians directly, and to build those costs into their facility rate negotiated with health plans. This approach would more explicitly use the market to determine fair payment rates.                  

    Areas For Further Consideration

    The No More Surprise Medical Bills Act should be applauded for tackling an important problem in a thoughtful manner. As written, Hassan’s bill would nearly eliminate surprise out-of-network bills for enrollees in employer-provided health plans.

    As lawmakers work to refine this legislation, they should consider expanding protections to enrollees in individual market plans and for out-of-network ambulance services. One study found that roughly half of all ambulance rides were billed out-of-network.

    Additionally, the notice and consent exceptions in the bill are arguably both too broad and too narrow in parts. It is unclear that out-of-network physicians at nonparticipating hospitals should have to obtain patient notice and consent for nonemergency care before billing out-of-network. And on the flip side, for patients at in-network facilities, it may be inappropriate to ever permit out-of-network billing for ancillary services (e.g., anesthesia, radiology, pathology) because there is too great a risk that patients will sign any such consent forms without true understanding or consideration of reasonable alternatives.

    Author’s Acknowledgement:

    This analysis is part of the USC-Brookings Schaeffer Initiative for Health Policy, which is a partnership between the Center for Health Policy at Brookings and the University of Southern California Schaeffer Center for Health Policy & Economics. The Initiative aims to inform the national health care debate with rigorous, evidence-based analysis leading to practical recommendations using the collaborative strengths of USC and Brookings. Through a grant from the Laura and John Arnold Foundation, Brookings is working to critically evaluate the prevalence, drivers, and policy implications of surprise medical billing, as well as develop potential nonpartisan policy solutions.


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