Eric W. Christensen, PhD

Eric W. Christensen, PhD


January 17, 2024 — According to the American Journal of Roentgenology (AJR), the No Surprises Act’s (NSA) independent dispute resolution (IDR) process would be financially unfeasible for a large portion of out-of-network (OON) claims for hospital-based specialties — more so for radiologists than other specialists.

“Although the NSA enacted important patient protections, IDR fees limit clinicians’ opportunities to dispute payer-determined payments and potentially undermine their bargaining power in contract negotiations,” wrote AJR first author Eric W. Christensen, PhD, of the Neiman Health Policy Institute in Reston, VA. “Therefore, IDR rulemaking may negatively impact patient access to in-network care.”

Christensen et al.’s accepted manuscript extracted claims from Optum’s de-identified Clinformatics Data Mart Database for hospital-based specialties occurring the same day as in-network emergency visits or inpatient stays (January 2017–December 2021). After identifying OON claims, claims were then batched via simulated IDR rules. Maximum potential recovered payments from the IDR process was estimated as the difference between charges and allowed amount. The percentage of claims for which the maximum potential payment, and one-quarter of this amount — a more realistic payment recovery estimate — would exceed IDR fees was determined, using $150 and $450 fee thresholds to approximate the range of final 2024 IDR fees. These values represented the percentage of OON claims that would be financially viable candidates for IDR submission.

Ultimately, the percentage of radiologists’ OON claims for which the maximum potential recovered payment exceeded fee thresholds of $150 and $450 (i.e., financial breakeven points for entering the NSA IDR process) was 55.0% and 32.1%, respectively; at payment of one-quarter of the maximum amount, these percentages were 26.9% and 10.6%, respectively.

Dr. Christensen discusses his research that assesses the fraction of out-of-network claims for which radiologists and other hospital-based specialists can expect to at least break even when challenging payer-determined payments through the No Surprises Act independent dispute resolution process, as a measure of the process's financial viability.

For more information: www.arrs.org


Related Content

News | ASTRO

May 17, 2024 — Registration opens today for the American Society for Radiation Oncology's (ASTRO) 66th Annual Meeting ...

Time May 17, 2024
arrow
News | Cardiac Imaging

May 17, 2024 — The Cum Laude Award-Winning Online Poster presented during the 124th ARRS Annual Meeting found that the ...

Time May 17, 2024
arrow
News | Enterprise Imaging

May 16, 2024 — AGFA HealthCare announced that St. Vincent’s Private Hospital in Dublin, Ireland, has chosen to implement ...

Time May 16, 2024
arrow
News | Artificial Intelligence

May 16, 2024 — deepc, the globally recognized digital medicine pioneer and market leader behind the leading AI operating ...

Time May 16, 2024
arrow
News | Pediatric Imaging

May 15, 2024 — Transfer learning (TL) models trained on heterogeneous public datasets and fine-tuned using institutional ...

Time May 15, 2024
arrow
News | Enterprise Imaging

May 15, 2024 — etherFAX announced the expansion of its partnership with Hyland, a leading global provider of intelligent ...

Time May 15, 2024
arrow
News | Cybersecurity

May 13, 2024 — In the wake of the cybersecurity breach targeting the prominent healthcare system Ascension, a new study ...

Time May 13, 2024
arrow
News | Radiology Imaging

May 13, 2024 — National Basketball Association (NBA), the National Basketball Players Association (NBPA), and the Next ...

Time May 13, 2024
arrow
News | Breast Imaging

May 10, 2024 — According to the Summa Cum Laude Award-Winning Online Poster presented during the 124th ARRS Annual ...

Time May 10, 2024
arrow
News | Radiation Oncology

May 10, 2024 — Mariana Oncology, a fully integrated biotechnology company pioneering a new era of radiopharmaceutical ...

Time May 10, 2024
arrow
Subscribe Now