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Memorandum in Opposition:
S.2556 Hannon
Prohibition on Balance Billing of Emergency Services The New York State Chapter of the American College of Emergency Physicians is opposed to Senate bill 2556. New York ACEP is concerned that the proposed legislation will have the unintended effect of decreasing patient access to specialty services in hospital emergency departments, contributing to emergency department overcrowding, and undermining the financial stability of the State's emergency care network. This bill requires nonparticipating
providers, including hospitals and physicians, to accept, as payment
in full, the "usual and customary" fees of commercial managed
care plans for emergency services provided to the managed care plans'
enrollees. In the case of Medicaid, Family Health Plus (FHP) and Child
Health Plus (CHP) enrollees, reimbursement to non-participating providers
is limited to the Medicaid rate for emergency services. The legislation
also prohibits balance billing for emergency services. New York is concerned that
this proposal will further reduce patient access to on-call specialists
in hospital emergency departments. The proposal will force non-participating
specialists to either eliminate their on-call time or absorb further
financial losses by accepting payment rates dictated by the managed
care plans. Loss of on-call physician services will delay patient
access to necessary emergency care and increase the number of patients
that must be transferred to obtain the required services. Larger hospitals
that currently accept patients in transfer from emergency physicians
in rural or smaller hospitals will have less capacity to do so. Crowding in emergency departments is an increasing problem in New York State and nationally. Recent surveys by New York ACEP and the State Department of Health show that hospital crowding and ambulance diversion are significant problems in nearly every geographic area of the State. This bill could have the unintentional effect of creating greater incentives for patients to access the ED for routine care by prohibiting balance billing and allowing managed care plans to set the price for services. In the case of Child Health
Plus and Family Health Plus, the bill will set the price for emergency
services for non-participating providers at the Medicaid rate. In
the commercial market, non-participating providers will be required
to accept the managed care plans' rate regardless of whether they
are part of the plans' panel. Plans will have less incentive to manage
patient care or discourage ED usage because the cost of such care
will be greatly reduced. In addition, there will be less incentive
for the plan to develop or promote its provider networks because the
amount of reimbursement that the plan will be required to provide
to non-participating providers will be the same or less (in the case
of CHP and FHP) than what they pay their participating providers.
In many areas of the State, the high concentration of managed care plans has already seriously eroded the negotiating power of physicians to get a fair price for their services. This bill will tip the balance even further in favor of insurers. It will have a negative effect on the emergency care network at a time when the State should be investing more, not less, resources to respond to emergency department crowding, recruiting specialty physicians, decreasing nursing shortages, combating terrorism and ensuring high standards for quality emergency care. New York ACEP strongly opposes
this legislation.
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