House surprise billing deal gets bipartisan support in Senate

The deal could let doctors take any billing disputes to arbitrators, rather than requiring doctors to accept a standard rate chart.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., right, walks to the Senate floor. (Credit: Cheriss May/Bloomberg)

House and Senate committees have agreed to a surprise medical billing deal that could favor doctors over health insurers.

The deal could let doctors take any billing disputes to arbitrators, rather than requiring doctors to accept a standard rate chart.

An announcement of the surprise billing deal, with a link to the legislative text and a section-by-section summary, is available here.

Here are the congressional leaders who announced the deal:

Bloomberg is reporting that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi pushed for the deal and wants to put it in a year-end legislative package, but the top Senate leaders have not endorsed the deal.

Health care provider groups and insurer groups have agreed on the idea that patients should be protected from surprise medical bills, but they have been battling for months over whether a surprise billing law should require insurers and providers to use a standard fee schedule or an arbitration process to resolve disputes.

Matt Eyles, president of America’s Health Insurance Plans, put out a statement objecting to the arbitration-based approach built into the deal.

“No one should ever face a surprise medical bill that can lead to financial ruin,” Eyles said in the statement. “While we continue to analyze the bill in all its complexities, we continue to believe strongly that any real solution must be clear and straightforward for consumers, and must protect patients by relying on fair, market-based prices based on locally negotiated rates — without loopholes. That’s how to ensure their health care costs remain more affordable.”

Surprise billing basics

Policymakers in Washington use the term “surprise billing” to refer to cases in which patients have reasonable expectations of receiving care for in-network prices but end up receiving big bills based on out-of-network rates.

Some of those incidents involve patients who are rushed to hospitals for emergency care, and who have no real chance to choose their providers.

The other incidents involve patients who go to hospitals in their health plans’ provider networks for care and end up receiving some services, such as anesthesiology services, from out-of-network doctors.

When patients get emergency care from in-network doctors, or hospital care from in-network hospitals and in-network doctors, provider network agreements spell out how much the doctors and hospitals can charge, and how much any deductibles, co-payments and coinsurance amounts will be. The agreements usually prohibit the providers from billing in-network patients for additional amounts.

When patients get care from doctors outside the plan networks, the doctors have no contractual relationship with the plans. The doctors can charge what they want to charge. The out-of-network doctors may try to bill the patients for part or all of the difference between what the plans want to pay and the billed amounts.

Traditionally, insurers, agents and brokers have called the practice of a doctor billing a patient for the difference between what the insurer will pay and the billed amount “balance billing.”

Agent and broker groups have spent years trying to control balance billing.

The House-Senate deal

The PDF file containing the text of the surprise billing deal discussion draft takes up 372 pages.

The current bill short title is the “No Surprises Act.”

The act would:

Although the discussion draft lets providers turn to IDR organizations, to resolve disputes, rather than using standard fee schedules, the IDR organizations themselves would have to base their rulings partly on “the median in-network rate” for care, according to the official discussion draft summary.

“The IDR entity is required to consider the median in-network rate, alongside relevant information brought by either party, information requested by the reviewer, as well as factors such as the provider’s training and experience, patient acuity and the complexity of furnishing the item or service, in the case of a provider that is a facility, the teaching status, case mix and scope of services of such facility, demonstrations of good faith efforts (or lack of good faith efforts) to enter into a network agreement, prior contracted rates during the previous four plan years, and other items,” according to the discussion draft summary.

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