THE NO SURPRISES ACT: PATIENT PROTECTION FROM SURPRISE MEDICAL BILLS, A DISPUTE RESOLUTION PROCESS
Patients and their families with individual or employer health insurance now have some protection from receiving surprise medical bills. The No Surprises Act has been crafted to protect consumers from unexpected medical bills for most emergency or non-emergency care. This includes out-of-network providers at in-network facilities, and air ambulance services from out-of-network providers. Uninsured, those who self-pay, as well as disputes between providers and healthplans will also have a path for dispute resolution. The Act took effect on January 1, 2022.
Beginning January 1, 2022, health care providers, facilities, and health plans will have to provide upfront costs to consumers. This includes potential out-of-network costs. The uninsured or those not using their insurance (self-pay), should receive an estimate over the phone or in-person. The estimate will be of the expected charges (a “good faith estimate”) prior to receiving a medical service. This should be followed-up with a written estimate including details of all the services, billing code, and associated charges.
This estimate should include the cost of:
However, items or services that are separately scheduled, such as a pre-surgery consultation, may not be included in this estimate. Beginning in 2023, your provider’s facility will also be required to provide cost information. This would include co-providers and co-facilities used for the scheduled service.
Here is an example of what a good faith estimate looks like:
https://www.cms.gov/files/document/good-faith-estimate-example.pdf.
If you have health insurance, the following will be banned:
Uninsured or self-pay:
For uninsured and self-pay patients, a dispute resolution process is available to resolve surprise bills from health care providers after having received a good faith estimate. The following criteria need to be met by uninsured or self-pay patients:
For those using a health plan:
If your insurance company denies paying for all or a part of your medical service, and if this violates the No Surprises Act, you can ask for an external review. Consider the following examples:
Beginning January 1, 2022, insured patients are no longer responsible for paying balance bills or out-of-network cost-sharing. Patients will only be responsible for the in-network copay or coinsurance amount. You should not receive a separate bill directly from a doctor or health care facility that is out-of-network. The health plan and the health facility/doctors have to resolve the payment dispute via an independent dispute resolution process.
It is up to the health plans and doctors/health care facilities to inform the patient whether the charge in the bill is protected under the No Surprise Act. Both must also inform patients about their surprise medical bill protections, through a direct notice and via a public website.
If patients do not receive this information, it is up to them to distinguish a surprise medical bill or balance bill.
In-network facilities and doctors have a contract with your health plan for a discounted rate. The plan will then cover 80% of the discounted rate and the patient covers 20%.
Out-of-network facilities and doctors charge their full rate, which is usually not recognized by the health plan. The health plan pays the facility based on the in-network rate, and the remaining amount is billed to the patient.
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