Biden administration to crack down on ‘junk’ health insurance plans, surprise billing
The changes include a proposed rule that would reduce the amount of time short-term health insurance plans can last and require companies that offer the plans to be more transparent about what is covered and what isn't.
The administration is providing guidance to hospitals that patients are either in-network, with the costs for their health care falling under billing limitations in the Affordable Care Act, or it is out-of-network care and billing costs are covered by a federal law known as the No Surprises Act.
The
President
"Americans thought they were buying temporary insurance that would provide real coverage," Biden said. "Instead, many have been saddled with thousands of dollars in medical bills these junk fees don't cover. And I think it's outrageous."
White House Domestic Policy Advisor
Those short-term health insurance plans, Tanden said, "are intended to provide temporary coverage as people transition from one source of coverage to another, like when we're between jobs."
During the Trump administration, those short-term plans, which don't have to provide the same type of health care coverage as other insurance plans, were allowed to last as long as three years, she said.
"The ACA has helped tens of millions of Americans access high-quality, affordable health insurance that protects Americans from being discriminated against because of pre-existing conditions," Tanden said. "Unfortunately, some types of insurance plans, like short-term limited duration insurance, don't provide comprehensive coverage. Importantly, they don't have to comply with the critical ACA protections."
The short-term plans have left some people with thousands of dollars in medical debt, including a man in
In addition to limiting those short-term health insurance plans to three months with a one-month renewal option, the proposed rule would "require plans that discriminate based on pre-existing conditions and don't offer comprehensive benefits to disclose their limits clearly to consumers," Tanden said.
On surprise medical billing, the
"Under this new guidance, we're making it clear that plans and providers cannot evade surprise billing rules simply by changing the terms they use in their contracts," Tanden said.
"For example, some health plans contract with hospitals, then try to claim that they are not technically 'in network,' " she added. "Frankly, what they are doing is gaming the system. This is not allowed and, as our guidance will describe, it must end."
Biden said during his speech that hospitals charging "crazy outrageous prices has to end."



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