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Bill > HB1251


VA HB1251

VA HB1251
Health insurance; definitions, payment to out-of-network providers, emergency services.


summary

Introduced
01/08/2020
In Committee
03/02/2020
Crossed Over
03/05/2020
Passed
03/12/2020
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
04/10/2020

Introduced Session

2020 Regular Session

Bill Summary

Health insurance; payment to out-of-network providers. Provides that when an enrollee receives emergency services from an out-of-network health care provider or receives out-of-network surgical or ancillary services at an in-network facility, the enrollee is not required to pay the out-of-network provider any amount other than the applicable cost-sharing requirement and such cost-sharing requirement cannot exceed the cost-sharing requirement that would apply if the services were provided in-network. The measure also provides that the health carrier's required payment to the out-of-network provider of the services is a commercially reasonable amount based on payments for the same or similar services provided in a similar geographic area. If such provider disputes the amount to be paid by the health carrier, the measure requires the provider and the health carrier to make a good faith effort to reach a resolution on the amount of the reimbursement. If the health carrier and the provider do not agree to a commercially reasonable payment and either party wants to take further action to resolve the dispute, then the measure requires the dispute will be resolved by arbitration. The measure establishes a framework for arbitration of such disputes that includes (i) a timeline for the proceedings, (ii) a method for choosing an arbitrator, (iii) required and optional factors for the arbitrator to consider, (iv) non-disclosure agreements, (v) reporting requirements, and (vi) an appeals process for appeals on certain procedural grounds. The measure requires the State Corporation Commission to contract with Virginia Health Information (VHI) to establish a data set and business protocols to provide health carriers, providers, and arbitrators with data to assist in determining commercially reasonable payments and resolving disputes. The measure requires the Commission, in consultation with health carriers, providers, and consumers, to develop standard language for a notice of consumer rights regarding balance billing. The measure authorizes the Commission, the Board of Medicine, and the Commissioner of Health to levy fines and take action against a health carrier, health care practitioner, or medical care facility, respectively, for a pattern of violations of the prohibition against balance billing. Additionally, the measure prohibits a carrier or provider from initiating arbitration with such frequency as to indicate a general business practice. The measure provides that such provisions do not apply to an entity that provides or administers self-insured or self-funded plans; however, such entities may elect to be subject such provisions. The measure authorizes the Commission to adopt rules and regulations governing the arbitration process. The measure has a delayed effective date of January 1, 2021.

AI Summary

This bill establishes new protections for patients against balance billing for emergency services and certain non-emergency services provided by out-of-network providers at in-network facilities. Key provisions include: - Prohibiting out-of-network providers from balance billing patients for emergency services or non-emergency surgical/ancillary services provided at in-network facilities. Patients only pay the in-network cost-sharing amount. - Requiring health carriers and out-of-network providers to negotiate a "commercially reasonable" payment amount. If they cannot agree, the dispute is resolved through arbitration. - Establishing a framework for the arbitration process, including timelines, selecting arbitrators, factors to consider, reporting requirements, and an appeals process. - Directing the State Corporation Commission to contract with a nonprofit organization to develop a data set and business protocols to assist in determining reasonable payment amounts and resolving disputes. - Authorizing the Commission, Board of Medicine, and Commissioner of Health to enforce the balance billing protections and levy fines for violations. The bill has a delayed effective date of January 1, 2021 and includes reporting requirements for health carriers on out-of-network claims and network participation changes.

Committee Categories

Budget and Finance, Business and Industry, Justice

Sponsors (8)

Last Action

Governor: Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP1080) (on 04/10/2020)

bill text


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