The No Surprises Act (“NSA”) became effective January 1, 2022 and protects consumers against surprise medical bills. However, a lesser known part of the NSA, called the Good Faith Estimate provisions, ...
Under the No Surprises Act, consumers are protected from financial liability beyond normal in-network cost sharing when they receive emergency services by an out-of-network facility or provider, ...
The No Surprises Act (NSA), which took effect on January 1, 2022, includes protections from surprise bills for patients who are uninsured or covered under group or individual plans. It will be ...
CMS unveiled Sept. 30 another rule aimed at protecting patients from surprise billing. The new interim final rule addresses several provisions in the No Surprises Act passed by Congress last year. The ...
In a final rule on fees for disputed claims, Health and Human Services and other departments are finalizing an amount of $115 per party for disputes initiated on or after the effective date of this ...
The No Surprises Act protects patients from the most pervasive types of surprise out-of-network bills. The law applies when a patient receives emergency care (including by air ambulances), some ...
HHS released an interim final rule Sept. 30 which fleshes out provisions in the No Surprises Act passed by Congress Dec. 27. Tony Mira, Anesthesia Business Consultants’ president and CEO, laid out how ...
The federal No Surprises Act formally went into effect Jan. 1, but CMS’ decision to apply “enforcement discretion” throughout 2022 has compounded confusion and concerns over its rollout. Well before ...
Molina has also paid $80 million in disputed and delayed claims to providers, plus $1.8 million in interest. Molina Healthcare of California has paid a $1 million fine levied by state regulators for ...