Only 29 percent of health plans in the individual market included out-of-network coverage in 2018, down from 58 percent in 2015, according to an analysis by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. “National commercial carriers, which are more likely to offer broader network plans, exited the individual market in droves in 2016 and 2017, leaving a market that is dominated by Blues and Medicaid-managed care organizations,” the report notes. “MMCO plans almost always offer closed-network plans, and even many Blues plans have shifted to narrow network offerings in the individual market.” In the small group market, 64 percent of plans included out-of-network benefits in 2018, down from 71 percent in 2015. UnitedHealthcare, which largely exited the individual market in 2017, recently announced it will drop Envision Healthcare, a large provider of hospital-based physicians, from its networks effective Jan. 1. 

Headline
In a commentary published March 26 by Healthcare Dive, AHA President and CEO Rick Pollack details why a new facility administrative policy from Anthem will…
Headline
An American Heart Association study published March 25 found that children born to mothers with premature placental separation could be at higher risk of heart…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Innovation Center yesterday announced the launch of a new model under Medicaid and the Children’s Health…
Perspective
Public
From birth to death, from critical injuries to elective surgeries, from crisis and disaster to community food banks and health improvement initiatives —…
Headline
The Coalition to Strengthen America’s Healthcare March 18 launched a new ad highlighting harmful practices by large corporate health insurers that drive up…
Headline
America’s hospitals and health systems are deeply committed to providing high-quality, accessible and affordable care, AHA President and CEO Rick Pollack March…