AHA today strongly urged the departments of Health and Human Services, Labor and Treasury and Office of Personnel Management to restore the independence of the independent dispute resolution process in the No Surprises Act Part 2 regulations.  
 
Hospitals and health systems are 鈥減rofoundly concerned about the decision by the departments to distort the No Surprises Act IDR process in favor of plans and issuers at the expense of patients and providers,鈥 AHA wrote. 鈥淏y directing arbiters to presume that the plan鈥檚 or issuer鈥檚 median contracted rate is the appropriate out-of-network reimbursement rate and creating a significantly higher bar for consideration of other factors means that the IDR process effectively will be unavailing for providers.鈥 

AHA also urged the agencies to make the IDR process more efficient and flexible in the batching of claims; align the hospital price transparency rule and good faith estimate requirements; and work with stakeholders to develop transaction standards and other operational solutions to enable accurate and efficient implementation of both the surprise billing protections and good faith estimates. 
 

Related News Articles

Headline
The House Energy and Commerce Committee today advanced by a 30-24 vote along party lines its portion of the fiscal year 2025 reconciliation bill following a鈥
Headline
Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. May 14 testified on President Trump鈥檚 discretionary budget proposal for fiscal year鈥
Headline
The House Ways and Means Committee today advanced its portion of the fiscal year 2025 reconciliation bill by a 26-19 vote along party lines, following an hours鈥
Headline
The House Energy and Commerce Committee May 13 began to mark up its portion of the fiscal year 2025 reconciliation bill. The committee has been instructed to鈥
Headline
The House Ways and Means Committee May 13 began to mark up its portion of the fiscal year 2025 reconciliation bill, with some proposals impacting the health鈥
Headline
The Department of Health and Human Services May 13 announced a 60-day public comment period opened for stakeholders regarding its request for information to鈥