Keckley Report January 3, 2022
Paul Keckley

Effective last Sunday, the No Surprises Act (NSA) passed by Congress in December 2020, became law. It protects consumers against surprise bills from out-of-network hospitals and physicians which apply to 10 million patient encounters including 1 in 5 emergency room visits and 1 in 6 in-network hospitalizations.

How it Works

Patients are required to pay in-network copays, deductibles for emergency care in a hospital, a freestanding ER or urgent care center, air ambulance service and elective care at in-network hospitals or surgery centers where clinicians may be out-of-network. Put another way, balance billing is prohibited for out of network charges submitted by a provider at a qualifying in network facility; and for essentially all emergency services, though some exceptions still...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Congress / White House, Govt Agencies, Insurance, Patient / Consumer, Provider
Ellison Institute of Technology campus in Oxford to focus on HealthTech as one of 4 key areas of technological innovation
Plate tectonics and the new CMS prior authorization rule | Viewpoint
Opinion: Readers respond to funding academic medical centers, the ‘residency research arms race,’ and more
How to prepare your workforce to think like AI pros
Confronting Addiction From Prevention to Recovery

Share This Article