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NAMAS | Insurance Discrimination - Against the Provider

News Article

Originally published November 8, 2024
by National Alliance of Medical Auditing Specialties 

When the concept of “insurance discrimination” rears its ugly head, we often think of it in the context of when an insurance company treats some people differently than others based on protected classes, such as race, national origin, sex, or religion.  Sometimes, this type of discrimination occurs through underwriting guidelines, coverage denials, refusal to renew coverage, limiting coverage, or imposing artificial age limits on coverage.  However, there is another type of “insurance discrimination” that I find particularly fascinating – discrimination against certain types of providers.

In 2010, the United States experienced a dramatic change in healthcare regulations through the passage of the Affordable Care Act (“ACA”).  Of particular note, the ACA included a provision that prohibits discrimination by insurers against providers acting within the scope of their licensure. 42 U.S.C. § 300gg-5.  Of course, a payer is still permitted to establish varying reimbursement rates based on quality or performance measures.  Id.  When insurers violate the ACA, the United States Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”) is obligated to take action. 42 U.S.C. § 300gg-22.  However, HHS has never enforced the provider nondiscrimination provision of the ACA in the 15 years since it was passed.

Further, the No Surprises Act, passed in 2022, requires HHS, the Secretary of Labor, and the Secretary of the Treasury to issue a proposed rule implementing the provider non-discrimination protections under the ACA. These were supposed to be proposed by Jan. 1, 2022, and implemented 6 months after the conclusion of the comment period. There has been no proposed rule yet... [Read More]

Read the full article by BMD Member Jeana M. Singleton as originally published by the National Alliance of Medical Auditing Specialties. If you have any questions about health law, you can contact Jeana at jmsingleton@bmdllc.com or 330.253.2001.


Physician Non-Competition Agreements 2022

Contract provisions with restrictions on physicians practicing in the same area should they change employment have been around for decades. In Ohio, courts continue to state that while provisions are generally disfavored, non-competition provisions remain enforceable. Specifically, as to physician non-competes, the courts note that such agreements are further scrutinized regarding the adverse effect on the public interest to keep healthcare professionals in a community. Courts have continued in more cases than not to enforce restrictive covenants against physicians.

Immigration Attorney Talks Crisis in Ukraine (published by Community Legal Aid, 4/6/22)

Duriya Dhinojwala interview with Community Legal Aid

BMD Attorney Marlon Primes Appointed to the Georgetown Law Board of Visitors

BRENNAN, MANNA & DIAMOND attorney and former Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio, Marlon Primes, has been appointed to the Georgetown Law Board of Visitors.

Brennan Manna Diamond Congratulates 2022 Crain’s Cleveland Notables in Law

BMD Press Release

BMD Adds Evidence Optix® to its Litigation eDiscovery Workflow

Insight Optix, a legal technology company, is pleased to announce that Brennan Manna Diamond (BMD), a business law firm with more than 75 attorneys and nine offices across the country, is adding Evidence Optix (EO) to its discovery workflow.