The Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services Aug. 20 released a report presenting data on complaints and enforcement efforts by the agency concerning title XXVII of the Public Health Service Act, which includes both the surprise billing and price transparency provisions of the No Surprises Act. As of June 30, 2024, CMS received more than 16,000 complaints and closed 12,700 with 400 complaints with PHS violations. In total the agency reported over $4 million in restitution for closed cases. Top complaints against plan issuers include non-compliance with Quality Payment Amount requirements, late payment after independent resolution determination, and non-compliance with 30-day initial payment or notice of denial payment requirements. Top complaints against providers relate to surprise bills and good faith estimates.

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The House Education and Workforce Committee May 21 unanimously passed the Transparency in Billing Act (H.R. 8684). The bill would require off-campus hospital…
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The Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission approved recommendations it will issue to Congress in its June report on oversight and increased…
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In think‑tank reports, like the one released this week by Paragon Health Institute, hospitals are often reduced to abstractions — payment rates, charts,…
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The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services April 1 released a joint FAQ with the Departments of Labor, the Treasury, and the Office of Personnel…
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The Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange announced that it is conducting a survey on how health care providers are implementing good faith estimates for…
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The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 16 announced it will transition later this year to a new centralized platform for managing federal…