Surprise! Out-of-Network Billing for Emergency Care in the United States

Authored by journals.uchicago.edu and submitted by smurfyjenkins

In the United States, hospitals and physicians independently negotiate contracts with insurers. Therefore, a privately insured individual can be treated at an in-network hospital’s emergency department but receive a large unexpected bill from an out-of-network emergency physician working at that facility. Because patients do not choose their emergency physician, emergency physicians can remain out of network and charge high prices without losing patient volume. We illustrate that this strong outside option improves physicians’ bargaining power with insurers. We conclude by analyzing New York’s efforts to address out-of-network billing through binding arbitration between physicians and insurers over out-of-network payments. This intervention reduced out-of-network billing by 12.8 percentage points (88%).

iwantbutter on August 15th, 2020 at 17:29 UTC »

"Out of network" shouldn't be a thing. I shouldn't be paranoid that a specialty, a doctor, or a procedure that I require could cost significantly more if I'm already paying for insurance. I literally do not understand what is so hard to get about this.

houseofprimetofu on August 15th, 2020 at 17:27 UTC »

Yep! California is another state that outlawed "surprise billing."

I had employer provided healthcare for most of my life, through the same provider. They have tried to charge me, as recently as last year, for "out of network doctors." Example: my gastro specialist. Saw at facility A, all included. Had procedure done at facility B. Doctor wasn't "in network" at B, even though she was at A and literally nothing changed in my eyes except she walked next door.

Edit: for those of you looking to find a way to resolve your surprise bill in California, here's a PDF from the CA Dept of Health: http://www.dmhc.ca.gov/Portals/0/HealthCareInCalifornia/FactSheets/fsab72.pdf

Gemmabeta on August 15th, 2020 at 16:52 UTC »

Medicine is not the free market.

Who price-shops for their hospital (of which there is probably only 1 in a 100 mile radius) and their ER attending/nurses when dying of a heart attack?