Resources

Client Alerts, News Articles, Blog Posts, & Multimedia

Everything you need to know about BMD and the industry.

No Surprises Act Update: The IDR Portal is Open

Client Alert

The No Surprises Act (“NSA”) became effective January 1, 2022, and has been the subject of lawsuits and criticisms since its inception. The goals of the No Surprises Act are to shield patients from surprise medical bills, provide to uninsured and self-pay patients good faith estimates of charges, and create a process to resolve payment disputes over surprise bills, which arise most typically in emergency care settings. We have written about  Part I and Part II of the NSA previously. This update concerns the Independent Dispute Resolution (“IDR”) procedure created by Part II but applicable to claims covered by Part I. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (“CMS”) finally opened the Portal for providers to submit disputes to the IDR process following some updated guidance regarding the arbitration process itself. 

The federal IDR process that the No Surprises Act creates is meant to resolve disputes between an out-of-network provider and a payor over what the out-of-network payment should be. Because the NSA limits providers to collecting the in-network cost-sharing amount from the patient, the remaining reimbursement amount must be paid by the insurance company. When state law does not set the out-of-network reimbursement rate and the provider does not agree on an amount established by the payor, the new federal IDR process will be used to determine the payment owed by the health plan to the provider. 

The IDR process is a “baseball” style arbitration: the arbiter must choose whichever side’s offer is closest to the amount the arbiter determines to be correct. Providers disfavor the IDR procedure outright because, in their eyes, it tips the scale in favor of payers. Specifically, providers took issue with the Part II guidance that requires arbiters to assume that the qualifying payment amount (“QPA”), the median in-network rate set by health insurers, is the appropriate out-of-network rate barring any meaningfully significant evidence from a provider to indicate otherwise. 

New CMS Guidance 

On February 23, 2022, the federal District Court in the Eastern District of Texas struck down key provisions of regulations implementing the NSA in Texas Medical Ass’n v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. For more information about this ruling, check out our previous Blog Post. The Texas district court vacated the portion of the IDR process requiring independent dispute arbiters to begin with the assumption that the QPA rate is the appropriate out-of-network amount to pay for the items or services in question. This ruling motivated CMS to publish updated Guidance in April 2022 to clarify their IDR process. 

The Guidance requires IDR arbiters to consider other information in addition to the QPA, or median in-network, rates for billed items or services. In addition to the QPA rate, providers can submit other items for the arbiter to consider, including:

  • the level of training, experience, and quality and outcomes measurements of providers or facilities;
  • the regional market share held by the provider or facility;
  • the acuity of the patient, member or enrollee receiving the service or the complexity of the service;
  • the teaching status, case mix and scope of services the facility or provider offers; and
  • demonstration of good faith efforts, or lack of efforts, to enter into network contact agreements with one another.

Arbiters are directed to consider only information that they consider credible. However, the arbiters are not allowed to consider the usual and customary charges for the services, billed charges, or the amounts paid by government programs for such services during the IDR process. They also cannot decide the actual amount or impose a specific number on the parties. The only decision the arbiter can make is which offer is closest to the correct amount. The new guidance also clarifies that arbiters are not responsible for deciding whether in-network median contracted rates are correct. That responsibility, according to CMS, is outside their role to effectively aid in resolving the providers-payers dispute with IDR processes. 

Because CMS had to delay the opening of the IDR Portal, they have specified that certain flexibilities will be temporarily allowed. CMS warns providers that, due to the large volume of IDR claims that might be filed not that the Portal is open, CMS will:

  • Grant requests for extensions submitted by the parties or certified IDR entities, as appropriate.
  • Monitor the volume and provide additional guidance, including updates to the timeframes under the Federal IDR process, as necessary. Updates will be announced on www.cms.gov/nosurprises, and parties with disputes in process will be notified directly in advance of an update taking effect. 

Note that providers must undertake a thirty-day open negotiation period with the payor prior to submitting a claim to IDR. However, if you are a provider that has completed the thirty-day negotiation period and have been waiting to submit a claim to the IDR portal, now is the time to start that process. Typically, providers must submit an IDR claim within four days of the end of the negotiation period, but for now, the Departments will permit submission of a notice of initiation of the IDR process within fifteen business days following the opening of the IDR portal. Be sure to include information pertaining to the topics that IDR arbiters can now use in their review, summarized above, as well as any other relevant information that might help the arbiter understand what the appropriate rate should be. 

If you have any questions about the No Surprises Act and how it applies to your practice, or would like help working through the IDR process,  please contact BMD Healthcare and Hospital Law Members Ashley Watson (abwatson@bmdllc.com) or Daphne Kackloudis (dlkackloudis@bmdllc.com). 


Federal and Ohio Laws on Surprise Billing

Beginning in January 2022, Ohio providers and healthcare facilities will need to comply with both the federal No Surprises Act (“NSA”) and the state surprise billing law (HB 388), which are both designed to protect patients from unexpected medical bills.

New Year, New Laws, Old Form Documents? Exhibit A: Changes in Florida’s Real Estate Contracts

Settling into a New Year often brings renewed energy into setting and pushing new goals of building business relationships, increasing sales, and moving Letters of Intent and negotiations into final, signed agreements. It’s all too easy to grab a form document off the Internet (Google, anyone?), or to pull the last document in your files as a template for your next agreement. However, changes in the law can take effect at the beginning of the calendar year, as well as mid-year or fiscal new year, and sometimes on a random date in between. Your awareness – or lack of awareness – in changes in the law can mean the difference between keeping you and your business operating within the law or putting you at great financial and legal risk for not complying with the law. It can also result in financial and time savings or additional burden in time and costs.

Sports Betting Legal in Ohio

Ohio has made sports betting legal with Governor DeWine signing House Bill 29 into law on December 22, 2021. The Casino Control Commission will regulate sports betting in Ohio and estimates that the launch date for sports betting will be January 1, 2023.

Banking and Cannabis: Is it Legal

Marijuana is still a Schedule 1 drug and is illegal under federal law. However, I am not aware of any federal banking law or regulation, or any other federal law or regulation, which explicitly makes it illegal for banks and other financial institutions to provide their traditional services to state legal cannabis businesses.

Protections Under Federal and Ohio Law for Bona Fide Prospective Purchasers of Contaminated Property

Most industrial/commercial property developers are generally aware of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (“CERCLA”), often also referred to as “Superfund”. CERCLA, a United Stated federal law administered by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, was created, in part, because the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recognized that environmental cleanup could help promote reuse or redevelopment of contaminated, potentially contaminated, and formerly contaminated properties, helping revitalize communities that may have been adversely affected by the presence of the contaminated properties. Commercial property developers should be aware that CERCLA provides for some important liability limitations for landowners that own contaminated property impacted by materials hazardous to the environment. It can also assist with landowners concerned about the potential liabilities stemming from the presence of contamination to which they have not contributed. In particular, CERCLA provides important liability limitations for landowners that qualify as (1) bona fide prospective purchasers (BFPPS), (2) contiguous property owners, or (3) innocent landowners.