Lawmakers, Department of Insurance focus on Blue Cross, Springfield
Clinic controversy
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[March 24, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – An ongoing contract dispute
between a major health insurance company and a large health care
provider in Springfield is drawing the attention of both state lawmakers
and the state Department of Insurance.
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois has been under scrutiny since July
after it failed to reach an agreement with Springfield Clinic to be part
of the insurance company’s network. As a result, policy holders who
receive care at that clinic have been forced to change providers or pay
higher out-of-network copayments.
Springfield Clinic is a private, independent, for-profit health care
provider that serves people in central Illinois. About 55,000 of those
are Blue Cross members, according to Blue Cross.
On Monday, the Illinois Department of Insurance fined BCBS’s parent
company, Health Care Service Corp., $339,000 for failing to notify the
agency of a material change in its network, the first such fine the
agency has ever issued since Illinois enacted the state’s Network
Adequacy and Transparency Act in 2017.
Under that law, insurers are required to report to the agency any
material change to an approved network plan within 15 days after the
change occurs.
The official break between BCBS and Springfield Clinic took effect July
1 for its Health Maintenance Organization plans, and Nov. 17 for its
Preferred Provider Organization plans. The company, however, did not
formally notify the department of that change until earlier this month,
resulting in a $1,000 fine for each day the filings were late.
For its part, BCBS has said the contract dispute centers on
reimbursement rates. It says Springfield Clinic was seeking a 75 percent
increase in its rates, which the insurance company says are already
above average for the region and the state.
A spokesperson for Springfield Clinic did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
In a statement, BCBS senior vice president Krishna Ramachandran
characterized the late filings as a misunderstanding.
“Though we had a reasonable and well-informed opinion that Springfield
Clinic’s decision to leave our network did not trigger any network
change filing, when the Department requested one within the past few
weeks, we promptly complied,” he said. “As we evaluate the Department’s
decision, we will continue to work collaboratively and in compliance
with applicable laws and regulations while ensuring access,
affordability and quality in health care for the more than 8 million
Illinoisans we cover.”
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Illinois State Capitol building in Springfield
(Capitol News Illinois file photo)
The fine itself has proved to be controversial as well because although
the 2017 law authorizes the Insurance Department to levy fines for
noncompliance, the agency has never adopted formal administrative rules
spelling out how the fines would be calculated and assessed.
That was the subject of discussion Tuesday at a meeting of the Joint
Committee on Administrative Rules, or JCAR, a legislative committee that
exercises oversight of the administrative rulemaking process, where
Republicans questioned why it has taken so long to promulgate rules.
Insurance Department general counsel Joanna Coll explained that the
agency is responsible for enforcing both state and federal network
adequacy standards. The federal standards apply to policies sold through
the Affordable Care Act marketplace.
But she said previous administrations at both the state and federal
level showed little interest in regulatory enforcement.
“So the federal (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) initially
under the previous administration, they did not want to engage in
network adequacy at all and had actually forced the feds to backtrack on
the situation,” she said. “Under President Biden there has been a
renewed interest in federal regulations on this topic. So, we have been
very actively trying to dance to keep up with the updating federal
regulations and make sure that they are enforced in full under the
Illinois law that you all worked so hard to pass.”
Meanwhile, both BCBS and Springfield Clinic were scheduled to appear
Tuesday afternoon before the House Insurance Committee. But that meeting
was canceled because regular floor action in the House was delayed that
day due to an extended closed-door Democratic caucus meeting that lasted
over three hours.
A spokeswoman for the House Democrats said in an email that the hearing
would be rescheduled but that an exact time and day has not been
arranged between all the parties.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government and distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |