Provider Charges And State Surprise Billing Laws: Evidence From New York And California.

Aliza S Gordon, Ying Liu, Benjamin L Chartock, Winnie C Chi
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Abstract

Surprise billing laws that allow dispute arbitration relying on provider charges may incentivize out-of-network providers to increase their charges to increase upcoming or future out-of-network payments. Although the federal No Surprises Act forbids arbitrators from considering charges during payment disputes over surprise bills covered by the act, states with existing laws can continue to use the specified state laws, which may allow the consideration of charges. This analysis examined provider charges in two such states, using claims data to compare trends in billed charges for out-of-network care during surprise bill scenarios involving nonemergency inpatient hospitalizations. The analysis considered New York, where state law uses arbitration tied to charges; California, where state law uses a payment standard rather than charges; and a comparison group of states without a law regarding surprise billing. We estimated that provider out-of-network charges for the nonemergency out-of-network bills we studied increased by $1,157 (24 percent) in New York after the passage of New York's surprise billing law and decreased by $752 (25 percent) in California compared to states without surprise billing laws. Assistant surgeons and surgical assistants had a large increase in charges in New York from before to after the law's passage, which may have driven the overall increase in charges.

供应商收费和州意外账单法:来自纽约和加利福尼亚的证据。
允许根据提供商收费进行争议仲裁的意外计费法可能会激励网络外提供商提高收费,以增加即将到来或未来的网络外支付。尽管联邦《无意外法案》禁止仲裁员在该法案所涵盖的意外账单支付纠纷中考虑收费,但有现行法律的州可以继续使用可能允许考虑收费的特定州法律。该分析检查了两个这样的州的提供者收费,使用索赔数据来比较在意外账单情况下涉及非紧急住院患者的网络外护理收费趋势。该分析以纽约州为例,该州法律采用与指控挂钩的仲裁;加州,该州法律使用支付标准而不是收费;和一组没有关于意外付款法律的州进行比较。我们估计,与没有意外账单法的州相比,在纽约通过意外账单法后,我们研究的非紧急网络外账单的供应商网络外费用在纽约增加了1,157美元(24%),而在加利福尼亚州减少了752美元(25%)。从法律通过之前到之后,纽约的助理外科医生和手术助理的收费大幅增加,这可能推动了收费的总体增长。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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