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Commentary: How your in-network health coverage can vanish before you know it

Elisabeth Rosenthal, KFF Health News on

Published in Health & Fitness

State and federal regulators have the authority to regulate insurers’ networks and could end the practice, Hoffman said. But until now “there hasn’t been federal regulation about continuity of coverage,” particularly how to define it. She suspects that the apparent surge in contract disputes between insurers and providers stems from hospital price transparency regulations that took effect in 2021 and have allowed hospitals to compare reimbursement rates with one another.

Indeed, Mount Sinai said it was demanding better reimbursement from UnitedHealthcare because it had discovered that it was being paid “substantially less” than “peer institutions.”

Many insurers say they will continue paying for a period after a contract ends — often 60 to 90 days — or to complete an “episode of care,” for a pregnancy, in particular. But with, say, cancer, would that mean one round of chemotherapy or the full course of treatment, which could last for many years? Is it continuity of coverage if a patient must change oncologists midstream or if a patient has to leave an effective therapist?

Erin Moses, who works for a small nonprofit, found a new therapist she liked after she and her husband moved to California’s Central Coast in February last year. In September, she received a bill from the therapy group saying it had terminated its contract with Anthem because the insurer was slow in reimbursement, leaving her with a bill of $814.

“It’s not like we couldn’t pay it, but my husband and I are trying to save for a house, and it’s a big chunk of change,” she said.

Patients are often caught unaware — and left holding the bag. When Laura Alley fell off a ladder in September 2020 and needed surgery to repair a broken pelvis, the hospital was in-network, as was the trauma surgeon.

 

In her submission to the “Bill of the Month” (the source of other examples in this article), a joint project of KFF Health News and NPR, Alley wrote: “What I could not possibly have known” was that the group that provided the anesthesia “was in dispute with our firm’s insurance provider, and after July 30, 2020, they were no longer in-network.”

She felt like “a pawn,” she said. “As I am working to recover from a traumatic injury, I am stuck in the middle of a dispute between an enormous insurance company and a large physicians group.”

She and her husband own a small architecture firm and ended up paying “nearly $10,000” for out-of-network anesthesia services. (This type of out-of-network bill to the patient would now be prohibited by the No Surprises Act, which took effect in 2022.)

None of this will be news to Feldman, the Mount Sinai patient who was an innocent bystander in the hospital system’s dispute with Oxford Health Plans. Feldman’s parents called her recently, saying they’d received a letter from their insurer, Anthem, that on May 1 it might end its contract with NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital — where Feldman’s stepmother is being treated for breast cancer.

It is bad for patients’ health — and sanity — that the perceived promises of care in their insurance plans can suddenly disappear midyear. And regulators can do something about that: obligate providers and insurers to maintain their contracts with one another for the full term of patients’ policies, so no patients are left in the lurch.


©2024 KFF Health News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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