Cargando…

Out‐of‐Network Air Ambulance Bills: Prevalence, Magnitude, and Policy Solutions

POLICY POINTS: Out‐of‐network air ambulance bills are a type of surprise medical bill and are driven by many of the same market failures behind other surprise medical bills, including patients’ inability to choose in‐network providers in an emergency or to avoid potential balance billing by out‐of‐n...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: FUSE BROWN, ERIN C., TRISH, ERIN, LY, BICH, HALL, MARK, ADLER, LOREN
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7482379/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32525223
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-0009.12464
_version_ 1783580779725455360
author FUSE BROWN, ERIN C.
TRISH, ERIN
LY, BICH
HALL, MARK
ADLER, LOREN
author_facet FUSE BROWN, ERIN C.
TRISH, ERIN
LY, BICH
HALL, MARK
ADLER, LOREN
author_sort FUSE BROWN, ERIN C.
collection PubMed
description POLICY POINTS: Out‐of‐network air ambulance bills are a type of surprise medical bill and are driven by many of the same market failures behind other surprise medical bills, including patients’ inability to choose in‐network providers in an emergency or to avoid potential balance billing by out‐of‐network providers. The financial risk to consumers is high because more than three‐quarters of air ambulances are out‐of‐network and their prices are high and rising. Consumers facing out‐of‐network air ambulance bills have few legal protections owing to the Airline Deregulation Act's federal preemption of state laws. Any federal policies for surprise medical bills should also address surprise air ambulance bills and should incorporate substantive consumer protections—not just billing transparency—and correct the market distortions for air ambulances. CONTEXT: Out‐of‐network air ambulance bills are a growing problem for consumers. Because most air ambulance transports are out‐of‐network and prices are rising, patients are at risk of receiving large unexpected bills. This article estimates the prevalence and magnitude of privately insured persons’ out‐of‐network air ambulance bills, describes the legal barriers to curtailing surprise air ambulance bills, and proposes policies to protect consumers from out‐of‐network air ambulance bills. METHODS: We used the Health Care Cost Institute's 2014‐2017 data from three large national insurers to evaluate the share of air ambulance claims that are out‐of‐network and the prevalence and magnitude of potential surprise balance bills, focusing on rotary‐wing transports. We estimated the magnitude of potential balance bills for out‐of‐network air ambulance services by calculating the difference between the provider's billed charges and the insurer's out‐of‐network allowed amount, including the patient's cost‐sharing. For in‐network air ambulance transports, we calculated the average charges and allowed amounts, both in absolute magnitude and as a multiple of the rate that Medicare pays for the same service. FINDINGS: We found that less than one‐quarter of air ambulance transports of commercially insured patients were in‐network. Two‐in‐five transports resulted in a potential balance bill, averaging $19,851. In the latter years of our data, in‐network rates for transports by independent (non‐hospital‐based) carriers averaged $20,822, or 369% of the Medicare rate for the same service. CONCLUSIONS: Because the states’ efforts to curtail air ambulance balance billing have been preempted by the Airline Deregulation Act, a federal solution is needed. Owing to the failure of market forces to discipline either prices or supply, out‐of‐network air ambulance rates should be benchmarked to a multiple of Medicare rates or, alternatively, air ambulance services could be delivered and financed through an approach that combines competitive bidding and public utility regulation.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7482379
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-74823792021-09-01 Out‐of‐Network Air Ambulance Bills: Prevalence, Magnitude, and Policy Solutions FUSE BROWN, ERIN C. TRISH, ERIN LY, BICH HALL, MARK ADLER, LOREN Milbank Q Original Scholarship POLICY POINTS: Out‐of‐network air ambulance bills are a type of surprise medical bill and are driven by many of the same market failures behind other surprise medical bills, including patients’ inability to choose in‐network providers in an emergency or to avoid potential balance billing by out‐of‐network providers. The financial risk to consumers is high because more than three‐quarters of air ambulances are out‐of‐network and their prices are high and rising. Consumers facing out‐of‐network air ambulance bills have few legal protections owing to the Airline Deregulation Act's federal preemption of state laws. Any federal policies for surprise medical bills should also address surprise air ambulance bills and should incorporate substantive consumer protections—not just billing transparency—and correct the market distortions for air ambulances. CONTEXT: Out‐of‐network air ambulance bills are a growing problem for consumers. Because most air ambulance transports are out‐of‐network and prices are rising, patients are at risk of receiving large unexpected bills. This article estimates the prevalence and magnitude of privately insured persons’ out‐of‐network air ambulance bills, describes the legal barriers to curtailing surprise air ambulance bills, and proposes policies to protect consumers from out‐of‐network air ambulance bills. METHODS: We used the Health Care Cost Institute's 2014‐2017 data from three large national insurers to evaluate the share of air ambulance claims that are out‐of‐network and the prevalence and magnitude of potential surprise balance bills, focusing on rotary‐wing transports. We estimated the magnitude of potential balance bills for out‐of‐network air ambulance services by calculating the difference between the provider's billed charges and the insurer's out‐of‐network allowed amount, including the patient's cost‐sharing. For in‐network air ambulance transports, we calculated the average charges and allowed amounts, both in absolute magnitude and as a multiple of the rate that Medicare pays for the same service. FINDINGS: We found that less than one‐quarter of air ambulance transports of commercially insured patients were in‐network. Two‐in‐five transports resulted in a potential balance bill, averaging $19,851. In the latter years of our data, in‐network rates for transports by independent (non‐hospital‐based) carriers averaged $20,822, or 369% of the Medicare rate for the same service. CONCLUSIONS: Because the states’ efforts to curtail air ambulance balance billing have been preempted by the Airline Deregulation Act, a federal solution is needed. Owing to the failure of market forces to discipline either prices or supply, out‐of‐network air ambulance rates should be benchmarked to a multiple of Medicare rates or, alternatively, air ambulance services could be delivered and financed through an approach that combines competitive bidding and public utility regulation. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-06-11 2020-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7482379/ /pubmed/32525223 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-0009.12464 Text en © 2020 The Authors. The Milbank Quarterly published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Millbank Memorial Fund This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Original Scholarship
FUSE BROWN, ERIN C.
TRISH, ERIN
LY, BICH
HALL, MARK
ADLER, LOREN
Out‐of‐Network Air Ambulance Bills: Prevalence, Magnitude, and Policy Solutions
title Out‐of‐Network Air Ambulance Bills: Prevalence, Magnitude, and Policy Solutions
title_full Out‐of‐Network Air Ambulance Bills: Prevalence, Magnitude, and Policy Solutions
title_fullStr Out‐of‐Network Air Ambulance Bills: Prevalence, Magnitude, and Policy Solutions
title_full_unstemmed Out‐of‐Network Air Ambulance Bills: Prevalence, Magnitude, and Policy Solutions
title_short Out‐of‐Network Air Ambulance Bills: Prevalence, Magnitude, and Policy Solutions
title_sort out‐of‐network air ambulance bills: prevalence, magnitude, and policy solutions
topic Original Scholarship
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7482379/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32525223
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-0009.12464
work_keys_str_mv AT fusebrownerinc outofnetworkairambulancebillsprevalencemagnitudeandpolicysolutions
AT trisherin outofnetworkairambulancebillsprevalencemagnitudeandpolicysolutions
AT lybich outofnetworkairambulancebillsprevalencemagnitudeandpolicysolutions
AT hallmark outofnetworkairambulancebillsprevalencemagnitudeandpolicysolutions
AT adlerloren outofnetworkairambulancebillsprevalencemagnitudeandpolicysolutions