Wednesday, July 29, 2015

More in Minnesota have health coverage but still can't afford to be sick

In the past year, Minnesota’s main hospital and clinic groups filed nearly 9,000 lawsuits against people with large or long-standing medical debts — a sharp increase since 2005, according to a Star Tribune analysis of court records.
Once a leading cause of personal bankruptcy in the United States, medical debt was widely expected to decline as more Americans got health insurance following federal health reform. Instead, shifts in the insurance market are pushing more people toward high-deductible policies that can require them to pay as much as $7,500 before any insurance benefits kick in.

To ensure strong patient satisfaction and prevent these lawsuits, hospitals and groups need to provide estimates to patients prior to their medical visit, procedures and tests. Patients will contine to take on more of the financial risk of healthcare.

http://www.startribune.com/more-minnesotans-have-health-coverage-but-still-can-t-afford-to-get-sick/318545021/

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Out-of-network medical bills a costly shock in N.J.

They were moments of crisis for each family. A newborn who wasn’t breathing was rushed to intensive care. A 15-year-old skier who wiped out on a slope in the Catskills needed surgery to reconstruct his shoulder. A 65-year-old insurance agent who survived a heart attack needed urgent bypass surgery to clear his arteries.
The stress didn’t stop once these medical crises passed, however. Within a few weeks, each family received an unexpected medical bill.
They had been savvy enough to follow their insurers’ rules and choose in-network hospitals to maximize their coverage and minimize their out-of-pocket costs. But one or more of the physicians who took care of them — and over whom they had no choice — did not participate in their insurance network.

Enablemyhealth allows surgeries, tests and all treatment to be managed Upfront. Know what providers are in network for insurance plans. Know what the cost is before you receive that surprise medical. Hospitals and groups need to solve this problem equally as much as successfully treating patients! 

Here is the complete article:

http://www.northjersey.com/news/out-of-network-medical-bills-a-costly-shock-in-n-j-1.1345737

Thursday, July 23, 2015

NY's New "Surprise" Medical Bill Law

Health care consumers in New York had a great deal to celebrate when, on the last day of the Affordable Care Act’s first open enrollment period, the state legislature passed new consumer protections from “surprise bills"—medical bills to consumers that result from the unexpected use of out-of-network medical providers, or bills which impose far higher costs on consumers than they have reason to expect. The “Emergency Medical Services and Surprise Bills” law, together with associated changes in a number of other statutes, is a response to years of advocacy and reflects the considerable efforts of the State Department of Financial Services to bridge the different perspectives of consumers, the health insurance industry, and New York’s medical societies. Prior to the new law—which is effective April 1, 2015—insured individuals often complained about receiving inadequate reimbursement (or none at all) from their insurers for medical services that they received outside of a provider network. In many cases the patients were unaware that the medical services they were receiving were, in fact, out of network and thus more expensive. Many patients were not financially prepared to handle these additional costs. The problem was so common that these types of consumer complaints outnumbered all other complaints handled by the state’s health consumer assistance agencies, insurance regulators, and the state Attorney General’s Health Care Bureau. - See more at: http://familiesusa.org/blog/2014/04/new-york%E2%80%99s-new-surprise-bill-law-rolls-out-new-health-insurance-protections-consumers#sthash.SRn51QAY.dpuf

Read the complete article:

http://familiesusa.org/blog/2014/04/new-york%E2%80%99s-new-surprise-bill-law-rolls-out-new-health-insurance-protections-consumers

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Massachusetts Hospitals violate price transparency law

Hospitals and groups in Massachusetts have been ignoring the Massachusetts law requiring patients be give estimates 2 days prior to a procedure or test. This is why Enablemyhealth is so important: read more -

https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2015/06/23/despite-law-hospitals-flummoxed-requests-for-price-information-survey-finds/4gfgPrC4J2NCWDcJpZhXZO/story.html