no surprises act good faith estimates

Providers Say They Need More Time to Comply With Surprise Bill Requirement

Health care providers say they need more time to comply with the federal surprise billing law’s requirement that they supply certain patients with good-faith estimates of the potential charges they are likely to incur for medical procedures. Preparing such estimates for self-insured, uninsured, and other requesting patients is far more difficult and time-consuming than policy-makers thought it would be, provider groups insist, and they also note that there currently is no automated means of producing such estimates within the time limits imposed by the No Surprises Act, which was signed into law in late 2020. The requirement is scheduled to [...]

2022-06-17T06:00:48-04:00June 17, 2022|Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services|

Surprise Bill Law’s “Good-Faith Estimate” to Challenge Providers

The requirement to give patients “good-faith estimates” of the costs associated with planned medical procedures will pose one of the biggest challenges to providers seeking to meet the implementation requirements of the 2020 No Surprises Act, which was intended to protect consumers from surprise medical bills, especially from providers not in their health insurers’ provider networks. Under the law’s implementing regulations, providers are often responsible for delivering good-faith estimates to their patients within 24 hours of scheduling a procedure.  Eventually, the “convening provider” also will need to anticipate patients’ potential costs beyond the procedure itself and collect estimates for those [...]

2022-04-11T06:00:59-04:00April 11, 2022|hospitals|
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