News & Updates

In cooperation with the American Ambulance Association, we and others have created a running compilation of local and national news stories relating to EMS delivery. Since January, 2021, over 1,900 news reports have been chronicled, with 48% highlighting the EMS staffing crisis, and 34% highlighting the funding crisis. Combined reports of staffing and/or funding account for 82% of the media reports! 99 reports cite EMS system closures/agencies departing communities, and 95% of the news articles reference staffing challenges, funding issues and response times.


Click below for an up to date list of these news stories, with links to the source documents.

Media Log Rolling Totals as of 5-15-24.xlsx

  • 28 Sep 2018 8:26 AM | Matt Zavadsky (Administrator)

    News Release

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Contact:             Mitzi Vince

    Phone:                 (304) 346-9864, ext. 3253

    E-mail:                 mvince@qualityinsights.org


    CHARLESTON, WV (September 20, 2018) – Quality Insights has partnered with the Kanawha County Emergency Ambulance Authority (KCEAA), the Partners in Health Network and Jan Care to produce two educational videos on the impact of community paramedicine in West Virginia.


    Community paramedicine (CP) is a form of expanded care – often referred to as mobile integrated health care services – that is delivered by nationally-registered paramedics who have received additional training. CP has been shown to help lessen unnecessary hospital admissions and emergency department visits while enhancing access to quality care for the state’s most vulnerable and rural residents.


    “We teamed up with community paramedicine experts in our area to produce these videos as a way to help both patients and healthcare providers understand the positive impact of CP on people with Medicare who live in West Virginia,” Biddy Smith, Network Task Lead for Special Projects at Quality Insights, said.


    The videos, which are available on Quality Insights Quality Innovation Network’s YouTube channel (www.youtube.com/qualityinsightsqin), include a patient-focused video titled “Community Paramedicine: Quality Health Care at Your Door” that explains the benefits of CP from the patient perspective. A provider- focused video, titled “Community Paramedicine: Enhancing Access to Quality Health Care,” examines the impact of CP on the healthcare industry.


    “Community paramedicine is filling a gap of needs within our communities,” Monica Mason, Director of Community Paramedicine at KCEAA, said. “Once patients are discharged from the hospital, our paramedics go out into the home and visit them to ensure that the plan of care from the hospital is continued to the home until they get back to their doctor’s office for follow-up and further recommendations.”

    Like Mason, fellow advocate Jerry Long believes community paramedicine can have a positive effect on decreasing overall healthcare costs by treating patients before they need to call 9-1-1.

    “I always felt like there was something more we could be doing,” Jerry Long, Director of Mobile Integrated Healthcare/Community Paramedicine at Jan Care, said. “We’re the second most rural state in the country. Our biggest healthcare crisis, in my opinion, is access. There are a lot of people still using emergency rooms as their primary care physician and that’s just a flawed system.”

    A community paramedic can address both medical and social needs. Community paramedics can provide home safety assessments, triage and referral services, chronic disease management education, support for family caregivers, medication compliance support, vaccinations and more.

    “It’s our hope that these videos can communicate the benefit of CP, not just for the patient, but also for the healthcare industry as a whole,” Smith said. “We want patients to understand how it can help improve their quality of life and we want providers to understand how CP is filling critical gaps in an effective and efficient way.”

    For more information about this project, contact Biddy Smith at bsmith@qualityinsights.org, or call (304) 346- 9864 ext. 3252.

    About Quality Insights Quality Innovation Network

    Quality Insights is the Quality Innovation Network-Quality Improvement Organization (QIN-QIO) for Delaware, Louisiana, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Quality Insights collaborates with healthcare providers, patients and allied organizations across the network to bring about widespread, significant improvements in the quality of care they deliver. We are committed to reaching the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' goals of better care, smarter spending and healthier people. To learn more about the network, visit  www.qualityinsights-qin.org.


  • 27 Sep 2018 9:09 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    San Diego Tribune Source Article | Comments Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    Nice to see a) the city and AMR attempting to revive the RAP prior to June 30th and b) San Diego including an MIH program in their RFP as a required component of a new ambulance contract! 

    Maybe a 1st in the nation to require a proposer implement an MIH program!

    Tip of the hat to Jeff Rollman from UCLA’s Fielding School of Public Health for the heads up on this story…

    San Diego will require new ambulance provider to weed out 911 abusers

    David Garrick

    September 25, 2018

    San Diego officials say the city’s new ambulance provider will be required to revive a program that targeted unnecessary 911 calls.

    The “request for proposals” for new ambulance providers that city officials plan to circulate this fall will require applying companies to agree to revive the program and cover the costs of potentially expanding it.

    The program, which ceased operations a year ago, used a software filter to identify and reroute the most frequent 911 callers: the homeless, the mentally ill and drug addicts.

    It drew national praise and saved the city money from 2010 through 2016 by allowing ambulances to focus on the most urgent emergency calls. But financial concerns prompted ambulance provider American Medical Response to stop providing the four paramedics required to operate the program.

    That company’s contract to provide San Diego ambulance services expires on June 30, giving the city an opportunity to require the program be revived after that.

    In June, the county grand jury issued a report criticizing the city for allowing the program, called the “resource access program,” to cease operations.

    City officials last week said they had little choice in the matter and that they are in ongoing discussions with American Medical Response about possibly reviving the program before June 30.

    The program’s software filter allowed city officials to build a history for each individual who was placing multiple calls to 911. It included the number of calls, length of time between the calls, the nature of the incidents and the treatment required.

    Paramedics contacted frequent callers to let them know about social services, mental health resources, shelters and other help. Some were also assigned case managers.

    Meanwhile, the city started to flag 911 calls from frequent callers and route them differently than an ordinary 911 call.

    Instead of sending those calls only to paramedics, they were sometimes routed to a wider network of service providers, including law enforcement, homeless outreach teams and social workers.

    In a response to the grand jury approved last week by the City Council’s Public Safety committee, city officials say the program was a success but that its elimination didn’t create the logistical strain described by the grand jury.

    The response says San Diego’s emergency call system can handle the extra volume of calls created by the city’s roughly 1,400 frequent callers, who generate 15 percent to 20 percent of all calls.


  • 26 Sep 2018 11:13 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    NPR Source Article | Comments Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    No highlights on this one – the whole article is a must read – the audio is available at the link – compelling and personal story….  This aired on NPR national this evening – strongly recommend the audio…

    Taken For A Ride: M.D. Injured In ATV Crash Gets $56,603 Bill For Air Ambulance Trip

    September 25, 20182:59 PM ET

    Heard on All Things Considered

    It was the first — and only — time Dr. Naveed Khan, a 35-year-old radiologist, ever rode in an all-terrain vehicle.

    Khan took the wheel from his friend and drove circles in the sand, on a trail along the Red River in Texas.

    "As soon as I turned to the side where my body weight was, this two-seater vehicle ... just tilted toward the side and toppled," Khan recalled. It landed on his left arm.

    "I had about a 6-inch-wide exposed flesh gap that I could see below, on my forearm," he said. "And I could see muscle. I could see the fat. I could see the skin. The blood was pooling around it."

    Khan, feeling lightheaded, tied his jacket around his arm like a tourniquet. He and his friend managed to right the ATV, drive back toward the street and call 911.

    When an ambulance delivered him to the emergency room at United Regional Health Care System in Wichita Falls, Khan was surprised to hear a doctor murmur that it was the worst arm injury he'd ever seen.

    Khan needed immediate helicopter transport to a trauma center for surgery in Fort Worth, if there was any hope of saving the arm.

    Groggy from painkillers, Khan managed to ask the doctors how much the flight would cost and whether it would be covered by his insurer. "I think they told my friend, 'He needs to stop asking questions. He needs to get on that helicopter. He doesn't realize how serious this injury is,' " Khan recalled.

    Flown 108 miles to John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth, the closest Level I trauma center, Khan was whisked into surgery to clean out the wound, repair his shattered bones and get blood flowing to the tissue.

    He had a total of eight operations to try to save his left forearm before he finally gave up. After weeks in the hospital, he asked the doctors to amputate, so he could get on with his life.

    And then the bill came.

    Patient: Naveed Khan, 35, a radiologist and married father of three young children in Southlake, Texas.

    Total bill: $56,603 for an air ambulance flight. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas, Khan's insurer, paid $11,972, after initially refusing altogether; the medevac company billed Khan for the remaining $44,631.

    Service provider: Air Evac Lifeteam, an air ambulance company that operates 130 bases in 15 states. It's owned by Air Medical Group Holdings, a holding company that owns four other air ambulance companies and one ground ambulance company. Air Medical, in turn, is owned by the giant private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts.

    Medical service: Khan was flown from the United Regional Health Care System in Wichita Falls, Texas, to the John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth.

    What gives: Khan got his first call from Air Evac Lifeteam just three days after the accident, while he was still lying in the hospital. A company representative told him the helicopter ride would most likely cost more than $50,000 and asked him how he planned to pay.

    For Khan, rapid transportation to the trauma center was essential since the blood supply to his arm had been cut off, said Dr. Rajesh Gandhi, the medical director for trauma services at JPS Hospital.

    "If there's no blood going that means there's no oxygen," he said. "It there's no oxygen, that means those cells are going to die." Minutes are precious and the helicopter can get from Wichita Falls to Fort Worth in an hour or less, half the time it takes by ground ambulance, he said.

    But complaints about sky-high bills to patients for air ambulance services are common. Since launching the "Bill of the Month" series in February, NPR and Kaiser Health News have received more than a dozen bills from patients like Khan who were charged tens of thousands of dollars for an air ambulance ride even after insurers' payments.

    Air ambulance companies defend their charges.

    Rick Sherlock, president of the Association of Air Medical Services, a trade group, said air ambulances require a more highly trained crew than a ground ambulance, because only the sickest or most seriously injured patients need air transport.

    AAMS commissioned a study to determine the actual cost of a medevac ride. The report found it takes about $2.9 million a year to run a single helicopter base. Each base handles about 300 transports a year, and the rides cost about $11,000 each, according to the report.

    A spokeswoman for Air Evac Lifeteam said the company bills people so much because it is trying to make up for what she said are meager payments from Medicare and Medicaid.

    "Our real cost per flight is the $10,200 plus the unreimbursed cost on each flight for Medicare, Medicaid and patients without any coverage," wrote Shelly Schneider, the company spokeswoman.

    The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said it pays an average of $4,624 per ride, plus $31.67 a mile, which works out to an average Medicare reimbursement of $6,556 for helicopter ambulance rides for seniors. Medicaid in most states pays less.

    The industry has been advocating hard to get Medicare to boost its reimbursements, Sherlock said. There are bills pending in both the House and Senate that would do so, but there hasn't been much movement on them.

    But others say the industry's cost estimates are inflated by profit-driven expansion of a lucrative industry. Ground ambulances often carry critically ill patients, too.

    Too many air ambulances sit idle much of the time, said Dr. Ira Blumen, a professor of emergency medicine at the University of Chicago and medical director of the university's Aeromedical Network.

    Blumen said the industry — which is dominated by a few companies owned by private equity firms — expanded dramatically in 2002, the last time Medicare boosted its payments. And now there are too many helicopters — 908 as of last year — fighting for patients and profits at the same time.

    "The number of helicopters is outrageous for the continental United States," he said. In the 1990s, most helicopters ran more than 500 flights per year on average. At that rate, the cost per flight today would be less than $6,000.

    A BCBS of Texas spokesman said the insurer does have a contracted rate with an in-network air ambulance company, but it is not Air Evac Lifeteam. After initially refusing to pay anything for an out-of-network claim, it agreed to the $11,972 payment.

    But in some sense, the reason ambulance companies charge so much is simply that they can: Air ambulances are largely regulated not as health care but as part of the aviation industry. Federal laws prevent states from limiting aviation rates, routes and services.

    So many people have been hit with shockingly high air ambulance bills that members of Congress on both sides of the aisle are trying to do something about it. Legislation to reauthorize funding for the Federal Aviation Administration that is moving through Congress now would create a council of industry experts to address balance billing and other issues and set up a complaint line for consumers.

    Resolution: Khan has allowed Air Evac Lifeteam to negotiate with BCBS of Texas over the remaining $44,000 air ambulance bill. The company has asked him to appeal to the state's Department of Insurance, and though he first balked at the suggestion, he is now considering doing so. Khan says he doesn't understand why the helicopter flight, which was an integral part of the emergency medical care he received, is treated differently from his surgeries, nursing care and physical therapy.

    "I thought that this was another piece of that puzzle," he said. "It turns out that this was glaringly different."

    He is waiting for resolution as he gets accustomed to life with his disability. Holding his baby son, he asked in frustration:

    "How do I hold him while he's crying and at the same time heat up his bottle?"

    Khan, who has had to fight with his insurance company to get coverage for a prosthetic arm, is frustrated when he learns that the air ambulance company expects him to pay far more than the actual cost of his flight.

    "It's unfair," he says. "It's random; it's arbitrary. It's whatever price they want to set. And to put that onto a person who's already been through what I've been through, I hate to say it, but it's cruel."

    The takeaway: Most people with health problems serious enough to require a helicopter flight are in no position to ask whether the medevac company is in-network or there's a choice. But if you or a family member has time to ask, it could pay off.

    If you're faced with a huge bill for a medevac ride, there are a few steps you should take.

    First, let your insurer's process play out. BCBS of Texas first denied Khan's claim altogether. But he looked closely at his policy and saw that the threat of loss of limb was explicitly covered. He appealed, and that's when the insurer paid $11,972.

    Second, negotiate! The air ambulance company might be willing to negotiate a settlement for a fraction of the bill to avoid turning to debt collectors, who would pay them pennies on the dollar.

    Both Sherlock of the Association of Air Medical Services and Schneider of Air Evac Lifeteam said companies will try to determine what a patient can afford. So people with high incomes may find it hard to obtain a substantial reduction for their bill. Still, if patients know the true cost of the service they received, they may be better equipped to negotiate a discount.

    Many air ambulance companies offer membership plans that can cost less than $100 a year and guarantee that the company will accept whatever payment an insurance company makes without billing the patient for the rest. But buyer, beware: When people need an air ambulance, they are often not in a position to choose which company will respond to the call.

    Bill of the Month is a crowdsourced investigation by Kaiser Health News and NPR that dissects and explains medical bills. Do you have an interesting medical bill you want to share with us? Tell us about it!


  • 26 Sep 2018 11:11 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Health Affairs Source Article | Comments Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    Interesting analysis of the proposed discussion draft of the balanced billing legislation – attached for your information….

    For our ambulance folks, note the last sections…

    Analyzing New Bipartisan Federal Legislation Limiting Surprise Medical Bills

    SEPTEMBER 25, 2018

    https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/hblog20180924.442050/full

    Surprise medical bills – those from out-of-network physicians that patients had no role in choosing – are not a new phenomenon, but national attention to the issue has grown tremendously in recent years, likely due to increased incidence and larger bills. Surprise bills arise most often during emergency care or during elective care involving ancillary physicians (such as radiologists, anesthesiologists, pathologists) who patients don’t actively choose and are not in the insurer’s provider network. Multiple studies have found that roughly one in five emergency department visits involved care from an out-of-network physician, as well as a not-insignificant share of elective inpatient admissions at in-network facilities. And these surprise bills can be quite large.

    Many states across the political spectrum have taken steps to mitigate this problem, including a handful in just the last two years: Arizona, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, and Oregon. However, current state laws do not apply to the roughly half of privately-insured Americans enrolled in so-called “self-insured” health plans that are common among large employers, because the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) precludes states from regulating these plans. While there are policies states could pursue to mitigate surprise out-of-network billing for their residents in self-insured plans as well, which we will explore in a future paper, we do not know of any states that have taken such an approach.

    Federal action, therefore, may prove necessary to protect people enrolled in self-insured employer health plans, as well as all privately-insured individuals in the majority of states that have not enacted comprehensive surprise billing legislation. Such federal regulation of self-funded health plans has well-established precedent. For example, as we described previously in a Health Affairs Blog post: 

    Federal law currently requires all health plans, including self-funded ones, to: 1) cover mental health care on par with physical health care; 2) cover recommended evidence-based preventive care services without any cost sharing from patients; 3) avoid caps on total coverage amounts; 4) cover patient services provided through approved clinical trials; and 5) contribute to public funding of health services research. Preventing surprise medical billing under self-funded plans would only modestly modify the existing scope of federal requirements yet provide substantial protections that are needed to avoid systematic unfairness.

    On September 18, a bipartisan group of six Senators – Michael Bennet (D-CO), Tom Carper (D-DE), Bill Cassidy (R-LA), Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Claire McCaskill (D-MO), and Todd Young (R-IN) – took such action, releasing draft legislation to protect patients in both insured and self-insured plans from these surprise out-of-network bills. Titled the “Protecting Patients from Surprise Medical Bills Act,” the draft legislation represents only the second near-comprehensive Congressional bill to address the issue (Representative Michelle Lujan Grisham’s “Fair Billing Act of 2017” being the other).

    Protecting Patients from Surprise Medical Bills Act

    The bipartisan draft legislation includes three important components that would jointly protect consumers from surprise medical bills:

    • Limiting patient cost-sharing to the amount they would owe to an in-network provider;
    • Setting a payment standard regarding what insurers owe providers in these situations; and,
    • Prohibiting providers from balance billing patients.

    The legislation would address the two main situations in which surprise out-of-network bills frequently arise:

    • Out-of-network emergency care; and
    • Out-of-network care, typically from ancillary physicians, delivered at an in-network facility (e.g., a hospital or ambulatory surgical center).

    Additionally, once a patient is stabilized following emergency care at an out-of-network facility, the patient must be notified about the potential for higher cost-sharing if they remain at the current facility and provided the option to transfer to an in-network facility.

    Critically, the bill’s protections would automatically kick in when either of these two situations occur, without the patient having to take any action. The patient would be required only to pay the standard amount they would have owed if the service in question was performed by an in-network physician and balance billing would be prohibited. The patient’s health plan, then, would have to pay the provider an amount determined by the state (or locality) in which the service was performed. If a state does not elect a payment methodology, then the federal default would require the health plan to pay (less the patient cost-sharing) the greater of:

    • The median in-network contracted rate for the service in a specified geographic area (the draft legislation does not specify from which data this median rate would be calculated); or
    • 125 percent of the average allowed amount for the service in a specified geographic area, as determined by the most recent year of data available from a “statistically significant benchmarking database maintained by a nonprofit organization,” such as FAIR Health, Health Care Cost Institute, or a state’s all-payer claims database if administered by a nonprofit.

    The out-of-network physician, therefore, would have to accept this amount as payment in full. It is unclear why both of these options were included, as the second option will almost always be higher than the first.

    This approach is broadly similar in structure to surprise billing laws in California and Connecticut, which similarly combine a regulation on the health plan to treat the “surprise” out-of-network service as in-network, a prescribed rate that the health plan must pay to the provider, and a prohibition on the provider from balance billing the patient above their standard in-network cost-sharing amounts. Other states with near-comprehensive laws, such as Illinois, New Jersey, New Hampshire, and New York, and Representative Lujan Grisham’s “Fair Billing Act of 2017” take a similar approach, but instead of directly prescribing a payment rate from health plan to provider, leave that determination up to a binding arbitration process.

    Notably, this approach goes beyond what was included in the Affordable Care Act (and subsequent rulemaking), which, for emergency care, limited patient cost-sharing to in-network rates and required insurers to pay providers a minimum rate, but did not prohibit these providers from balance billing patients. 

    Because this current proposal would prohibit balance billing, it would effectively cap total payments to providers at a particular payment rate. Under this type of approach, then, a key question becomes how to determine the appropriate payment rate.

    Areas for Further Consideration

    The rest of this blog discusses changes that should be considered as Senators work on revising this discussion draft, specifically with respect to (1) determining the appropriate payment rate, (2) which types of physicians the bill’s protections should apply to, and (3) the possibility of expanding protections to ambulance services.

    Determining the “Appropriate” Payment Rate

    We believe that the option of “at least” 125 percent of average allowed amounts is unnecessarily high and would drive up insurance premiums and potentially have counterproductive impacts on contracting decisions. Emergency care and ancillary physicians, for whom the patient typically has little to no role in choosing, may have little incentive to join insurer networks if they are guaranteed payments of 125 percent of the average allowed amounts when they remain out-of-network.

    Additionally, to the extent any similar bill defines payment based on a percentile of average contracted rates or allowed amounts, unintended impacts on future contract negotiations can be minimized by tying the rate to a point in time before passage of the bill, inflated forward by the Consumer Price Index or something similar.

    Determining the “appropriate” rate, though, is difficult. It is clear that payment should not be tied in any way to providers’ billed charges, which are largely untethered by market forces and tend to be extremely high in relation to Medicare’s payment rates, especially for specialties most commonly involved in surprise out-of-network billing. That charges are particularly high for these specialties is not a coincidence, as billed charges are primarily only assessed to the uninsured and patients receiving out-of-network medical care (insurers negotiate lower contracted rates for their enrollees receiving in-network care). For specialties where the patient has little or no choice among physicians, there’s an incentive to charge high amounts both because the physician (or the physician’s employer) can assess these charges to unsuspecting out-of-network patients and because the threat of doing so helps them obtain higher in-network contracted rates from health plans. Indeed, using data from provider charges reported to Medicare, Ge Bai and Gerard Anderson find that median charges for emergency medicine, anesthesiology, radiology, and pathology are all at least 400 percent of Medicare rates.

    The two main options are to tie payment rates in “surprise” out-of-network situations to some percentage of Medicare rates or average (mean or median) in-network contracted rates (either specific to the patient’s health plan or averaged across all health plans in a region) for the service. Or, like in California, the rate could be set at the greater of two options.

    Medicare rates have the benefit of being tied to the government’s best attempt at determining the relative value of different services and can easily be scaled up or down depending on policymaker preferences. Average in-network payment rates notionally have the benefit of being tied to an existing market price, but that premise is flawed with respect to emergency care and ancillary physician services, where network rates are artificially high today because patients lack choice and hence the normal dynamics of negotiating lower rates in exchange for higher volume largely do not apply. While we do not know of concrete data on the question, two studies have found average in-network rates for emergency care in commercial plans to be at roughly 300 percent of Medicare rates. And at least for certain services, two studies have found average in-network rates for radiologists in commercial plans to be at roughly 200 percent of Medicare rates. Both of these are relatively high compared to average in-network rates negotiated by most physician specialties.

    Alternatively, as we discuss in more detail in a 2016 paper, policymakers could introduce a “baseball-style” binding arbitration process to determine the appropriate rate.  In this process, an arbitrator chooses the more reasonable of the parties’ final positions instead of specifying a compromise, which should promote settlement. Or this decision could be avoided altogether by placing the onus on the hospital to pay ED and ancillary physicians directly and build those costs into their facility rate negotiated with a health plan, similar to how nursing services are treated today. Yale Professors Zack Cooper and Fiona Scott Morton have recommended an approach along these lines, with the goal of using the market to determine rates in these situations.

    How Broadly Should Surprise Billing Protections Apply?

    The case for protecting patients in emergency situations who are seen by a physician outside of their insurer’s network is relatively straightforward—markets cannot work when the consumers have no choices. Similarly, when receiving elective care at an in-network facility from an in-network physician, the patient does not have any reasonable choice of the ancillary clinicians – or often the neonatologist or assistant surgeon – who might be involved in her care, and thus should not be held liable for higher cost-sharing if that clinician was outside of her health plan’s provider network. The draft legislation, however, would apply its protections to all out-of-network care delivered at an in-network facility without any exception for obtaining patient consent, which is likely too broad of a restriction. No patient consent exception is needed for out-of-network ancillary care at an in-network facility, but for other types of physicians, there are legitimate instances—for example, a surgeon – where, before admission, a patient proactively chooses to see an out-of-network physician at that facility.

    Ambulances

    One notable omission from the discussion draft is any protection from out-of-network ambulance bills. In a study of large employer health plan claims, Christopher Garmon and Benjamin Chartock found that roughly half of all ambulance rides were billed out-of-network.  As the Senators work on revising this legislation, they should consider applying a similar approach as is used for out-of-network emergency care for ambulance rides.

    Conclusion

    This bipartisan draft legislation marks an important step forward in putting an end to surprise out-of-network medical bills nationwide. As work proceeds on this issue, lawmakers should focus on:

    • Determining the appropriate payment rate from the health plan to the provider in these instances, specifically considering a lower rate than the 125 percent of average allowed amounts in a region currently in the draft (and if using any percentile of average allowed or contracted amounts, pegging this calculation to a point in time before passage of the bill, inflated forward);
    • Narrowing the protection for all out-of-network services at an in-network facility to those most likely to involve surprise bills; and
    • Adding a protection for out-of-network ambulance bills.


  • 24 Sep 2018 2:16 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Source Article from Washington Post | Comments Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    Interesting profile on the outcomes from D.C.’s system.  A 50% bounce back rate is not terribly different than start-ups in other EMS systems.

    -------------------------

    Nurses in D.C.’s 911 center are helping cut some unnecessary ambulance runs, but not most

    By Clarence Williams

    September 23, 2018

    D.C. Fire and EMS officials found positive signs in the first 90 days of a $1 million nursing phone line at the 911 call center, but have yet to see big dividends in one of the program’s intended goals: reducing ambulance trips for patients who don’t need them.

    D.C. Fire Chief Gregory Dean sent a letter to the department this month highlighting early data from the “Right Care, Right Now” program that staffs a triage line at the 911 center with registered nurses. The nurses are there to diagnose callers who appear to have nonlife-threatening maladies or injuries and may not need medics or a fire crew and a trip to the emergency room.

    The fledgling program has been providing quick, private transportation for noncritical patients to clinics using a ride-share service, Dean’s letter said, and 911 callers who were processed through the nurse gave uniformly positive reviews about their experience in follow-up surveys.

    However, fire officials acknowledge that the program has not made a significant dent in the hundreds of calls they field daily that tie up EMTs, paramedics and ambulances with issues such as insect bites and toothaches.

    “There is a habit or pattern that we need to change. A lot of time people are not familiar with getting to a clinic. They are just used to calling 911. That’s not really what we wanted them to learn, but that’s what they’ve learned,” said Robert Holman, the D.C. Fire and EMS medical director. “We’re trying to establish a new pattern.”

    The changes are also intended to offer better health-care options than an emergency room visit provides.

    The triage program started in April, with nurses available on the 911 call line from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily at a cost of $1 million for salaries and a technology build-out.

    In the first 90 days, Dean’s letter showed, nearly half of all calls routed from a 911 dispatcher to the nurses still resulted in a D.C. fire unit being sent out because nurses sent the call back after hearing a caller describe their medical need.

    As nurses grow more comfortable making decisions, the program could help redirect callers to less urgent but still appropriate medical options, Holman said.

    “We are happy with the modest impact, but we would like to see this grow a bit more. I don’t think our [department] members are feeling the effects of this just yet,” in relieving first responders from tending to low-priority calls, he said.

    Before the launch, officials had estimated that as many as 70 percent of their 911 medical runs involved patients with conditions that are not life-threatening emergencies.

    The city’s revitalization and expansion have not waned, which keeps emergency call volumes up and demands high on city emergency services even as the so-far-modest nurse triage program tries to relieve some of that pressure, said Dabney Hudson, president of the firefighter’s labor union. “We’ve gained more calls through growth than they’ve gotten rid of with this,” Hudson said. “We have a capacity issue.”

    Between the April 19 launch and late August, registered nurses fielded 1,103 calls to work through issues with 911 callers, who in their initial conversations described a seemingly not-urgent medical need.

    Nurses can bounce back patients to a dispatcher if they decide an EMS or ambulance crew should respond. For the callers who need non-emergency medical care, the nurses will book an appointment with a primary-care doctor or clinic in the caller’s neighborhood who can see them within two hours. The nurses will also send a Lyft driver to take Medicaid-covered patients to and from a doctor or clinic.

    Of the 1,103 calls routed to nurses for questioning known as triaging, officials said that 130 patients were sent to clinics, 289 calls were canceled, and 131 calls received “self care,” which includes nurses advising a caller to take prescribed medications to stabilize blood pressure or blood sugar levels or to buy over-the-counter ointments for other problems.

    In the opening weeks, nurses “were over-triaging back to 911 and they were doing so with an abundance of caution,” Holman said.

    “I give feedback on every one of these calls,” he added.

    His feedback to nurses included instructions not to send ambulances for strains and pulled muscles in the lower back or migraines and headaches that did not indicate any other serious disorder like a spike in blood pressure.

    Holman said that as nurses have gained experience and feedback, the calls resulting in emergency crews being dispatched has dropped from a weekly average of 33 in June to 15 by late August.

    Hudson said he applauds the attempt to deal with call volume that cripples the department’s efficiency and burdens the workforce. However, he said union officials warned the department that the nurse program might prove ineffective following interviews and research the union did about failed efforts in Philadelphia and Richmond.

    “It’s the same issue every other large city has run into that tried to implement this. The return on investment wasn’t there,” Hudson said. “They just sent a firetruck or an ambulance. Obviously that still doesn’t solve our problem.”

    Transportation has been a significant success early on, Holman said, as officials report that on average it took 37 minutes from the time a patient spoke with a nurse to arrive at a clinic for a walk-in appointment. A non-emergency ambulance trip to the hospital, which would include a patient evaluation and processing, can take 40 to 60 minutes officials said, depending on the time of day and traffic.

    Officials said nurses tried to call each patient to follow up on their treatment and to “review their customer service experience.” During the first 90 days, officials said they received zero complaints and all 55 patients nurses contacted “provided positive feedback,” the letter said.

    Only one complaint arrived after the initial 90-day period, Holman said, and after reviewing that call he believes a nurse rightly refused a transport in August for a man with a sore throat.

    “It’s early but we’re very pleased with our customer satisfaction,” Holman said. “We think we’ve built a good system.

    We just want to increase the volume so more people can take advantage.”

    Destiny Banks was one of the early users.

    A Lyft driver took her to the Unity clinic on Minnesota Avenue after she became lightheaded during a therapy session in the spring. Her therapist dialed 911 because Banks was pregnant, had a previous instance of passing out and suddenly could not finish sentences during the session.

    She expected to hear sirens and see lights from an ambulance, but within about 15 minutes a Lyft driver arrived to take her to a clinic, which was initially disorienting for Banks.

    “I was confused more than nervous. I was okay with it, it was just different,” she recalled.

    A clinic employee talked to her on site, and she was seen within about 20 minutes by medical personnel, much more quickly than in any previous emergency room situation, she said.

    She was diagnosed as being dehydrated and sent home with instructions to drink more water.  Her daughter Avay’e was born Aug. 24, without issue.

    The nurse triage and clinic referral “might be weird to other people, too. But I’m glad they put it into play. Not every time it’s a dire emergency that you need an ambulance,” Banks said. And getting to care “was really fast.”


  • 21 Sep 2018 11:30 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Source Article | Article Suggested by Kristofer Schleicher | Comments Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    We know that some EMS agencies participate in the filming of TV shows, but you need to be very careful – the Office of Civil Rights takes these issues very seriously.

    Tip of the hat to Kristofer Schleicher, MedStar’s general counsel, for this article.

    Boston Hospitals Cough Up $1M for ‘Boston Med’ HIPAA Violations

    OCR announced Sept. 20 that it has fined three Boston-area hospitals close to $1 million for HIPAA violations involving the filming of ABC’s TV series “Boston Med.”

    By Fred Donovan

    September 20, 2018 - OCR announced Sept. 20 that it has fined three Boston-area hospitals close to $1 million for HIPAA violations involving the filming of ABC’s TV series “Boston Med.”

    OCR reached HIPAA settlements with Boston Medical Center (BMC), Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH), and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) for compromising patients’ PHI when they invited the “Boston Med” film crews on premises without first obtaining authorization from patients.

    “Patients in hospitals expect to encounter doctors and nurses when getting treatment, not film crews recording them at their most private and vulnerable moments,” said OCR Director Roger Severino. “Hospitals must get authorization from patients before allowing strangers to have access to patients and their medical information.

    Of the total fines, BMC paid $100,000, BWH paid $384,000, and MGH ponied up a hefty $515,000. Each hospital has agreed to provide workforce training as part of a corrective action plan that will include OCR’s guidance on disclosures to film and media.

    According to the OCR guidance: “Health care providers cannot invite or allow media personnel, including film crews, into treatment or other areas of their facilities where patients’ PHI will be accessible in written, electronic, oral, or other visual or audio form, or otherwise make PHI accessible to the media, without prior written authorization from each individual who is or will be in the area or whose PHI otherwise will be accessible to the media. Only in very limited circumstances ... does the HIPAA Privacy Rule permit health care providers to disclose protected health information to members of the media without a prior authorization signed by the individual.”

    Surprisingly, these are not the first HIPAA fines resulting from the filming of a TV series in a hospital. In 2016, New York Presbyterian Hospital (NYP) agreed to pay $2.2 million to OCR for HIPAA violations in filming “NY Med.”

    The New York hospital faced an OCR probe after it allowed film crews and staff to capture two patients on screen without getting the necessary authorization.

    In addition to the settlement fines, NYP agreed to a substantive corrective action plan. As part of the plan, OCR monitored the hospital for two years to ensure that it complied with HIPAA rules.

    “In particular, OCR found that NYP allowed the ABC crew to film someone who was dying and another person in significant distress, even after a medical professional urged the crew to stop,” OCR said at the time. 

    By allowing the media crew to film the patients, NYP allegedly disclosed PHI, including images of patients, OCR pointed out.

    “This case sends an important message that OCR will not permit covered entities to compromise their patients’ privacy by allowing news or television crews to film the patients without their authorization,” said then OCR Director Jocelyn Samuels.  “We take seriously all complaints filed by individuals, and will seek the necessary remedies to ensure that patients’ privacy is fully protected.”

    The OCR investigation also revealed that NYP allegedly did not safeguard patient information per HIPAA obligations. While filming, the ABC media crew could have accessed most of the healthcare facility, including areas where PHI was stored.

    That was not the first time that NYP ran afoul of HIPAA. Back in 2010, the hospital and Columbia University paid $4.8 million in HIPAA settlement fines after an alleged healthcare data breach.

    An OCR investigation found a data network that was shared by both facilities inadvertently allowed ePHI to be accessible on web-based search engines.

    The hospital paid $3.3 million out of the total settlement. OCR also developed a corrective action plan for the hospital, which included developing a risk analysis, implementing a risk management plan, reviewing policies, educating staff, and providing progress reports.


  • 21 Sep 2018 10:18 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Source Article | Comments Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    Not necessarily a ‘new’ approach, but an interesting way to position a solution to the high balance-billing issue… 

    Alacura has also contacted area ground ambulance providers (MedStar in 2016) promoting similar contracting proposals.

    FYI, Dr. Gamber is also the Medical Director for Plano Fire Department…

    A Dallas Company Is Going After Exorbitant Air Ambulance Bills

    09/20/2018by Shawn Shinneman 

    While some lawmakers at the federal level push for oversight to curb the enormous air ambulance bills that have grabbed headlines over the last few years, a Dallas company says it has a regulation-free solution.

    Founded three years ago, Alacura has inserted itself as a middle man between providers—which typically have no financial skin in the game—and commercial insurance companies, which have caught flack for their willingness to pay for only a relatively small portion of transport-related bills, leaving patients with balances that sail into the tens of thousands of dollars.

    Alacura has been able to cut deals with transport companies by promising a volume of “missions,” and by talking with insurers to figure out a price they’ll reimburse. Its contracts ensure that the payer covers the entire cost.

    “It’s the patients that get stuck in the middle,” says David Boone, who founded Alacura in 2015, “and that’s ultimately what we’re trying to fix.”

    Stories about high medical bills associated with airplane medical transports have not been hard to come by in recent years. The business model for major medical transport providers, says Alacura Medical Director Mark Gamber, has generally been to re-coop high overhead—related in-part to having highly trained personnel on call at all times—and transports of patients who don’t have insurance by charging commercially insured patients lots and lots of money.

    Reporting from outlets like the Los Angeles Times and New York Times and St. Louis Post-Dispatch, among others, have exposed patient bills as high as $40,000 to $50,000 for in-state trips. Boone says some of the out-of-state trips run much higher, estimating that a large air transport provider would price a trip from Los Angeles to Chicago at somewhere around $600,000. He can do it for between $55,000 and $60,000, he says, at a tab the insurer picks up in full.

    While some decisions have to be made very quickly, many of the patients who travel from one hospital to another via fixed-wing transports aren’t split-second decisions. There’s time for providers to call insurance companies, verify that the patients are in fact insured, and then make a call to put the transport teams into motion.

    Gamber, an ER doctor, can see the issue from the provider’s perspective. Hospitals and physicians are time-strapped and have no financial incentive to bargain hunt on behalf of their patients. So the way Alacura has set it up, when an insurer gets a call from a provider to verify a patient’s insurance coverage, the insurer will tell them to call Alacura to set up the transport, Gamber says.

    From there, Alacura chooses the appropriate transport company from within its network, and acts as the point man for communication should anything go wrong.

    The company has contracts set up with Blue Cross Blue Shield in Texas, Illinois New Mexico, Arizona, and Michigan, and is completing about 30 missions a month and growing, Boone says.

    So far, Alacura has been able to build its transport company network by targeting smaller and mid-sized companies, who seek the added volume. They credential the companies themselves to make sure they’re up to snuff, Gamber says. But both Gamber and Boone recognize that their model is in direct opposition to the business models at the largest transport companies in the country, one of which—Air Medical Group Holdings—is based right up Interstate 35E in Lewisville.

    Those companies are so far reluctant to give up their position. If things go right for Boone and Gamber, Alacura might force their hand.

    “There will be some bumps in the road, but ultimately where I think this will end is with partnering with more of them,” Gamber says. “There are some national-scope transport companies that will probably not appreciate what we’re doing and push back.

    Hopefully we’ll be able to partner with one of those, because right now we have a lot of regional relationships. Ideally, we can develop a national relationship.”


  • 13 Sep 2018 8:44 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Source Article | Article & Comments Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    The author and those he interviewed do a very good job sharing insight into the roles and challenges of the fire service of today… And tomorrow….

    A New Day in the Firehouse

    The job of firefighter has change almost beyond recognition, It’s not easy to do – or recruit those necessary to do it.

    BY DANIEL C. VOCK | SEPTEMBER 2018

    The job of a firefighter isn’t what it used to be. Take Charlottesville, Va., for example, where in just the past 18 months the fire departments in the city and surrounding Albemarle County have searched the wreckage of a plane crash in a hard-to-reach wooded area, performed water rescues after spring floods, responded to the derailment of a passenger train carrying Republican members of Congress and, most memorably, provided medical assistance during white supremacist rallies in Charlottesville, including one incident that left three people dead last summer. This was all in addition to dealing with downed power lines, an ammonia leak, frozen pipes and yes, even a few fires.

    The workload of fire departments has grown substantially, even as their core mission -- putting out fires -- has dwindled.

    “Communities tend to lean on the fire service in times of crisis,” says Charlottesville Fire Chief Andrew Baxter. “People are looking to the fire service for leadership and partnership for all aspects of emergency response.”

    But that ever-evolving mission has brought new strains. It requires training and planning for new dangers such as civil disturbances or active shooters. With increased call volumes, it requires more personnel at a time when a growing number of agencies are finding it difficult to recruit both career and volunteer firefighters, and to diversify their workforces to include more women and minorities. And it comes as some cash-strapped cities are questioning whether the old system of responding to larger call volumes by deploying more firefighters with bigger equipment at more fire stations is sustainable anymore. 

    Continued...

    Read Full Article>
  • 13 Sep 2018 8:24 PM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Source Article | Comments Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    Interesting publication in today’s HealthAffairs…

    While the NEMT model in most states do not include ambulances, some do… More disruptive innovation centered on enhanced patient experience and reduced costs.

    Shifting Non-Emergency Medical Transportation To Lyft Improves Patient Experience And Lowers Costs

    Brian Powers  Scott Rinefort  Sachin H. Jain

    SEPTEMBER 13, 2018

    Limited access to reliable transportation causes millions of Americans to forgo important medical care every year. Transportation barriers are most prominent among the poor, elderly, and chronically ill—populations for whom routine access to ambulatory and preventive care is most important.

    Payers that focus on vulnerable populations have taken steps to address transportation barriers by providing non-emergency medical transportation (NEMT) benefits to select beneficiaries.  A majority of Medicare Advantage (MA) plans and state Medicaid programs currently provide NEMT benefits.

    NEMT benefits are typically administered by specialized brokers that coordinate and dispatch private cars, taxis, or specialized vehicles to bring patients to medical appointments. Multiple reports have highlighted challenges with traditional approaches to NEMT delivery, including poor customer service, inadequate responsiveness, and fraud and abuse. In the face of these challenges, payers and health care delivery organizations have been experimenting with new strategies for delivering NEMT.

    An approach that has attracted considerable attention is the use of transportation network companies (TNCs)—such as Uber or Lyft—to provide NEMT services. NEMT brokers such as such as American Logistics CorporationNational MedTransAmerican Medical Response, and Access2Care are all now piloting TNC-based rides. New companies, such as Circulation and RoundTrip, have emerged to help hospitals and health plans offer TNC-based rides. And both Lyft and Uber are contracting directly with health plans and delivery organizations to provide NEMT services.

    Despite the proliferation of these programs, there is scant data regarding their impact. Here we report the results from a large-scale, system-wide implementation of Lyft-based NEMT services at CareMore Health.

    Partnering With Lyft And ALC To Provide Transportation

    CareMore Health is a physician-founded, physician-led integrated care delivery system. For many patients enrolled in its MA plans, CareMore provides a diverse range of NEMT services free of charge. Curb-to-curb (C2C) rides are most similar to traditional taxi or private car services. Patients that require extra assistance or specialized transport have access to door-to-door (D2D) and wheelchair accessible van (WAV) services.

    As is typical for MA plans, CareMore contracts with brokers to administer its NEMT benefits. Historically, these NEMT brokers arranged for rides using private car services. In 2016, CareMore launched a pilot program to evaluate the impact of Lyft-based C2C rides on patient experience and costs. The pilot ran for two months at select CareMore locations in Southern California, during which a total of 479 rides were provided. Results were encouraging: wait times decreased by 30 percent and per-ride costs decreased by 32 percent, and satisfaction rates were 80 percent.

    In light of the encouraging results from the pilot, CareMore expanded the program system wide. Partnering with NEMT broker American Logistics Corporation (ALC), CareMore began offering Lyft-based rides throughout all MA markets in August 2016, which included 75,000 members across 18 counties in California, Nevada, Arizona, and Virginia. 

    During the pilot, Lyft-based services occasionally led to confusion. Accustomed to branded vehicles, and inexperienced with Lyft and other TNCs, patients were sometimes confused when an unfamiliar car arrived to bring them to their medical appointments.

    Based on this feedback, adjustments were made to improve patient experience. First, the experience of booking did not change—patients call a CareMore associate who takes down information regarding time, pick-up, and drop-off locations. This information is then securely relayed to ALC, who uses custom-built software to schedule a Lyft driver at the requested time. Second, CareMore makes clear that Lyft, not the car services that patients may be accustomed to, will be providing the ride. This occurs when the ride is booked, and again when CareMore calls to confirm the ride.

    Members that would like to know the specific make and model of the car that has been dispatched are able to call a CareMore associate to obtain that information. Third, CareMore and ALC released a smart phone application—MyRide Manager—that allows patients, caregivers, and care team members to track and manage rides via an interface that resembles Lyft’s or other TNCs’ native applications. 

    Impact And Results

    The CareMore-Lyft-ALC partnership was launched across all CareMore MA markets in August 2016. Within three months, half of all C2C rides were Lyft-based. By the end of 2017, CareMore provided 91 percent of all C2C rides through Lyft, accounting for up to 7,000 rides per month, and a total of 68,993 rides over the course of 2017 (See Exhibit 1). At this point, the absence of Lyft availability in certain counties has limited the ability to scale the program any further.


    Results through the end of 2017 are in line with those reported during the pilot:

    • On Time Performance: On time performance (rides arriving within 20 minutes of scheduled pick-up time) for Lyft-based C2C rides was 92 percent, compared to 74 percent for non-Lyft rides. 
    • Wait Times: The average wait time for Lyft-based C2C rides was 9.2 minutes, compared to 16.6 minutes for non-Lyft C2C rides, a 45 percent decrease. Reductions in wait times were most pronounced among “on-demand,” return rides from clinics or other health care settings.
    • Patient Experience: Patient satisfaction results exceeded those from the pilot program, possibly reflecting the strategies discussed above aimed at reducing confusion. In a survey of CareMore patients using Lyft-based rides, 96 percent reported feeling “Safe” or “Very Safe” during their ride and 98 percent reported being “Satisfied” or “Very Satisfied” with the service (timeliness, cleanliness, and professionalism of the driver).
    • Costs: Lyft-based C2C rides cost CareMore 39 percent less, on average, than non-Lyft C2C rides. Reducing per-ride costs allowed CareMore to expand its NEMT benefit throughout the course of 2017, providing an additional 28,000 rides (a 12 percent increase) at no additional cost to the system.

    Next Steps

    From late 2016 through 2017, CareMore Health rapidly scaled access to Lyft-based NEMT rides across its MA patients. Lyft now provides the vast majority of C2C rides for CareMore patients, and doing so has improved patient experience, reduced wait times, and increased the overall efficiency of CareMore’s NEMT benefit.

    Although these results are encouraging, it is important to remember that TNC-based NEMT is not a panacea. Rural areas remain under-served by TNCs and there does not yet exist a robust TNC offering for older, sicker patients who require D2D or WAV services. Nonetheless, the cost-savings generated by switching to Lyft for C2C rides can help support increased access to NEMT for patients requiring specialized services.

    It remains to be seen whether or not the benefits of TNC-based NEMT extend beyond improved satisfaction and lower costs to fewer missed appointments and better health outcomes. The structure of the CareMore-Lyft-ALC partnership did not permit a formal evaluation on these dimensions. Though there are anecdotal reports that TNC-based NEMT can reduce missed appointments, rigorous analyses have not shown an effect. As TNC-based NEMT grows, attention should be paid to better clarifying this potential impact.


  • 12 Sep 2018 9:23 AM | AIMHI Admin (Administrator)

    Source Article | Insights Courtesy of Matt Zavadsky

    Interesting article… 

    There is currently legislation pending in Congress (H.R. 3780) which proposes to place quality requirements and mandatory cost reporting for air ambulance providers to be eligible for Medicare participation.  In summary:

    The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) shall establish minimum standards that must be met by air-ambulance suppliers and providers as a condition of their participation in Medicare.

    These standards must address:

    1. scope of practice, training, and clinical capability;
    2. medical equipment and vehicle attributes;
    3. documentation;
    4. medical direction and oversight;
    5. reporting of specified events;
    6. patient safety and infection control;
    7. clinical quality-management and performance-improvement programs; and
    8. particular populations. An air-ambulance provider or supplier that is accredited by an HHS-approved organization shall be deemed to be in compliance with these standards.

    HHS must establish an air-ambulance quality-reporting and performance program under which Medicare payment is determined according to a specified performance-based formula. Performance measures shall address patient safety, clinical quality, and over-triage.

    An air-ambulance provider or supplier must, subject to suspension of payment under Medicare, annually submit specified cost data to HHS.

    https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/3780

    Lawmakers call for greater oversight of air ambulance operators

    By Susannah Luthi 

    September 11, 2018

    Two senators are pushing the Trump administration to use regulation to target exorbitant air ambulance charges faced by airlifted patients.

    Sens. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) and Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) led a Monday letter to Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao to urge more oversight and support for consumer complaints. The lawmakers represent states that have seen headlines with sticker-shock stories of patients finding themselves facing tens of thousands of dollars in charges after being airlifted to a hospital.

    The Senate continues to mull changing air ambulance regulation through its upcoming Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization bill. State efforts to curb prices have faced a hurdle in courts due to the Airline Deregulation Act, which prevented federal regulation of airline prices.

    "Congress hardly could have imagined when the ADA was passed nearly 40 years ago that it would block states from overseeing healthcare services," McCaskill and Wicker wrote. "Given this dynamic, the Department of Transportation (DOT) should aggressively and effectively exercise its authority as perhaps the only regulator over air ambulance operators."

    The senators have asked Chao to explain how the Transportation Department is investigating consumer complaints against air ambulance operators and to specify how the agency is managing oversight and investigations of these operators.

    The letter requests a thorough explanation of the authorities the department has to regulate charges and require insurers to cover "reasonable costs," and asks whether the Federal Trade Commission or state attorneys general can prosecute air ambulance operators on behalf of consumers.

    The lawmakers reference a 2017 report from the Government Accountability Office that found the median charges from air ambulance operators doubled from 2010 to 2014, from about $15,000 to about $30,000 per trip.

    "Anecdotally, it is clear that a greater share of this cost is being passed along directly to consumers through a practice known as balance billing, but GAO was unable to determine the prevalence of this practice because of a lack of data," McCaskill and Wicker said.

    McCaskill for months has been probing balance billing issues including the charges left for patients by air operators and insurers that refuse to shoulder the full cost of transport. States are also increasingly taking up legislation to address balance billing, but their authorities are limited by ERISA law.


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