Duffy Erin L, Adler Loren, Ginsburg Paul B, Trish Erin
Erin L. Duffy ( Erin. Duffy@usc. edu ) is a postdoctoral fellow at the Leonard D. Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics, University of Southern California (USC), in Los Angeles.
Loren Adler is associate director of the USC-Brookings Schaeffer Initiative for Health Policy, Brookings Institution, in Washington, D.C.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2020 May;39(5):783-790. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2019.01138. Epub 2020 Apr 15.
Patients treated at in-network facilities can involuntarily receive services from out-of-network providers, which may result in "surprise bills." While several studies report the surprise billing prevalence in emergency department and inpatient settings, none document the prevalence in ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs). The extent to which health plans pay a portion or all of out-of-network providers' bills in these situations is also unexplored. We analyzed 4.2 million ASC-based episodes of care in 2014-17, involving 3.3 million patients enrolled in UnitedHealth Group, Humana, and Aetna commercial plans. One in ten ASC episodes involved out-of-network ancillary providers at in-network ASC facilities. Insurers paid providers' full billed charges in 24 percent of the cases, leaving no balance to bill patients. After we accounted for insurer payment, we found that there were potential surprise bills in 8 percent of the episodes at in-network ASCs. The average balance per episode increased by 81 percent, from $819 in 2014 to $1,483 in 2017. Anesthesiologists (44 percent), certified registered nurse anesthetists (25 percent), and independent laboratories (10 percent) generated most potential surprise bills. There is a need for federal policy to expand protection from surprise bills to patients enrolled in all commercial insurance plans.
在网络内医疗机构接受治疗的患者可能会非自愿地接受网络外供应商提供的服务,这可能会导致“意外账单”。虽然有几项研究报告了急诊科和住院环境中的意外账单发生率,但没有一项记录了门诊手术中心(ASC)的发生率。在这些情况下,健康计划支付网络外供应商部分或全部账单的程度也未得到探索。我们分析了2014 - 2017年基于ASC的420万次护理事件,涉及330万名参加联合健康集团、Humana和安泰商业计划的患者。十分之一的ASC护理事件涉及网络内ASC设施中的网络外辅助供应商。在24%的案例中,保险公司支付了供应商的全额账单费用,没有给患者留下余额账单。在我们考虑了保险公司的支付情况后,我们发现网络内ASC的8%的护理事件存在潜在的意外账单。每个护理事件的平均余额增加了81%,从2014年的819美元增加到2017年的1483美元。麻醉师(44%)、注册护士麻醉师(25%)和独立实验室(10%)产生了大部分潜在的意外账单。需要联邦政策将意外账单的保护范围扩大到所有参加商业保险计划的患者。