American Hospital Association urges CMS to extend enforcement discretion for No Surprises Act
One of the main concerns is the lack of methods for unaffiliated providers to share or receive good faith estimates in an automated manner.
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The American Hospital Association has urged the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to extend enforcement discretion for the No Surprises Act regulatory requirement that healthcare providers exchange certain information to create a good faith estimate for uninsured and self-pay patients – until the agency identifies, and providers can implement, a standard, automated way to exchange the information.
"In the interim final rule implementing this policy, CMS notes that it is exercising enforcement discretion until Jan. 1, 2023, as it may take time for providers and facilities to 'develop systems and processes for receiving and providing the required information,'" AHA wrote. "We agree that developing and implementing the solution will take time and cannot be achieved efficiently without additional guidance from CMS that identifies a standard technical solution that can be implemented by all providers."
One of the main concerns from the AHA is that there are currently no methods for unaffiliated providers to share or receive good faith estimates with a convening provider or facility in an automated manner. To share this information, billing systems would need to be able to request and transmit billing rates, discounts and other necessary information for the good faith estimates between providers/facilities.
This is not something that practice management systems can generally do, said the AHA, since billing information is traditionally sent to health insurers and clearinghouses, not other providers.
"Due to the lack of currently available automated solutions, this process would require a significant manual effort by providers, which would undoubtedly result in the convening provider being unable to meet the short statutory timeframes for delivering good faith estimates to the patients and could also lead to inadvertent errors," the AHA wrote.
AHA requested an extension in enforcement discretion until a technical solution has been found and implemented.
WHAT'S THE IMPACT
Without an automated standard, the AHA said, providers would need to determine individually how to transmit the information. That in turn could lead to variance throughout the industry, especially considering differences in size and technical sophistication among co-providers and facilities. Navigating a non-standardized process, the AHA contended, would increase administrative burden on providers.
To help work toward a standard solution, The AHA said it's partnering with the American Medical Association, the Medical Group Management Association and HL7 to create a workgroup to discuss potential technical solutions for sharing and receiving critical information among providers. The group will consist of providers and vendors with knowledge of provider systems.
THE LARGER TREND
In December 2021, the American Hospital Association, American Medical Association and other provider organizations sued the Department of Health and Human Services and other federal agencies over implementation of the No Surprise Act. The groups are not against the legislation, they said in the lawsuit filed in federal court but take issue with how HHS implemented a dispute resolution process in the bill.
The No Surprises Act prevented 2 million surprise bills for the commercially insured, according to a survey by AHIP and the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association released in May. The analysis further showed that, if the trend continues, more than 12 million surprise bills would be avoided in 2022.
Twitter: @JELagasse
Email the writer: jeff.lagasse@himssmedia.com