The proportion of emergency room visits to in-network hospitals that
result in out-of-network bills surged from 32.3% to 42.8% from 2010
to 2016, the study found. Over the same period, the proportion of
inpatient hospital admissions to in-network hospitals that result in
out-of-network bill surged from 26.3% to 42%.
Patients' tabs for these out-of-network bills has climbed too, from
an average of $220 to $628 for ER visits and from an average of $804
to $2,040 for inpatient hospital admissions.
"Out-of-network billing in both the inpatient and emergency room
settings is common and has become more common over time," said Dr.
Eric Sun, lead author of the study and a researcher at Stanford
University Medical Center in California.
"The amount of money involved can be a significant burden for many
patients," Sun said by email. "Even if they receive care at an
in-network hospital, they may still face out-of-network bills."
In the U.S., physicians in an insurer's network have agreed to
accept a set amount from the insurer as payment in full for their
services. Out-of-network physicians, however, are not constrained by
any in-network agreements and can seek additional payment from
patients, a practice known as out-of-network balance billing.
At many hospitals in an insurer's network, some of the physicians
may still be out-of-network, particularly for specialties like
anesthesiology. This can lead to balance billing surprises even when
patients make a point to seek care at an in-network hospital.
For the current study, researchers examined data on more than 6.4
million inpatient admissions and 17 million emergency room visits
for patients with private health insurance in all 50 U.S. states.
For ER visits, out-of-network billing was particularly common for
ambulance services: 85.6% of ambulance encounters resulted in
balance billing, researchers report in JAMA Internal Medicine.
[to top of second column] |
About one-third of patients treated by emergency physicians at
in-network hospitals got balance billed, as did more than one in
five patients receiving care from an internist or an
anesthesiologist.
With inpatient admissions, specialties with the most balance billing
included radiology, emergency medicine, internal medicine,
anesthesiology, cardiology, pathology, ambulance transport, family
practice, and obstetrics and gynecology.
Patients who had balance bills in the top 10% faced more than $1,000
of out-of-pocket costs for ED care and more than $3,000
out-of-pocket for inpatient admissions, the study found.
One limitation of the study is that researchers didn't know for
certain how many balance bills were truly a surprise to patients.
But most people probably don't expect these bills for care at an
in-network hospital, the study team notes.
Researchers also lacked data on how much of balance bills patients
actually paid. It's possible some people didn't pay all or part of
these bills.
Still, it's easy to see how these bills would catch patients off
guard, said Dr. Robert Steinbrook, editor at large of JAMA Internal
Medicine and an adjunct professor at Yale University School of
Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut.
"In an emergency, a patient is often unable to choose the emergency
department, the physicians or the ambulance service," Steinbrook,
author of an editorial accompanying the study, said by email. "And,
a patient may seek routine in-network care at an inpatient hospital
or outpatient facility, only to later find out that in-network
physicians were not available to care for them."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2ToJzyJ JAMA Internal Medicine, online August
12, 2019.
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |