It was the first day of her family's vacation in the San Juan Islands last June when Danielle Laskey, who was 26 weeks pregnant, thought she was leaking amniotic fluid.

A registered nurse, Laskey called her OB-GYN back home in Seattle, who said to seek immediate care. Staff members at a nearby emergency department found no leakage. But her OB-GYN still wanted to see her as soon as possible.

Laskey and her husband, Jacob, made the three-hour trip to the Swedish Maternal & Fetal Specialty Center-First Hill. Laskey had sought the clinic's specialized care for this pregnancy, her second, after a dangerous complication with her first: The placenta had become embedded in the uterine muscles.

Back in Seattle, doctors at the clinic found Laskey's water had broken early, posing a serious risk to her and the fetus, and ordered her immediate admission to Swedish Medical Center/First Hill. She delivered her son after seven weeks in the hospital. Though she was treated for multiple postpartum complications, she was well enough to be discharged the next day. Her son, who is healthy, went home a month later.

Laskey soon developed a fever and body aches, and she was told by her OB-GYN to go to Swedish's emergency department. She said doctors there wanted to admit her when she arrived Aug. 20 and scheduled a procedure for Aug. 26 to remove a fragment of placenta that her body had not eliminated on its own.

Laskey, who had already spent weeks away from her 3-year-old daughter, chose to go home. She returned for the procedure, which went well, and she was home the same day.

Then the bills came.

The Patient: Danielle Laskey, 31, was covered by a state-sponsored plan offered by her employer, a local school district, and administered by Regence BlueShield.

Medical Service: In-patient hospital services for 51 days, plus a one-day stay that included a second placenta removal procedure.

Service Provider: Swedish Medical Center/First Hill, part of Providence Health & Services, a large, nonprofit, Catholic health system.

Total Bill: Swedish, through Regence, billed about $120,000 in cost sharing for Laskey's initial hospitalization and about $15,000 for her second visit and procedure.

What Gives: The specialized clinic caring for Laskey before her hospital admission was in her insurance plan's network. The clinic's doctors admit patients only to Swedish Medical Center, one of the Seattle area's only specialized providers for Laskey's condition — which, given that connection, she assumed was also in the network.

So after being urgently admitted to Swedish, Laskey believed her bills would be largely covered, with the couple expected to pay $2,000 at most for their portion of in-network care because of her plan's out-of-pocket cost limit.

It turned out Swedish Medical Center was out of network for Laskey's plan and, at first, Regence determined that Laskey's hospitalizations were not emergencies. Jacob said that in November a Regence case manager initially told him that his wife's lengthy hospitalization was an emergency admission and out-of-network charges would not apply. But then he said the case manager called back and said the charges would apply after all, because Danielle had not come in through the emergency department.

Both Washington state and federal laws prohibit insurers and providers from billing patients for out-of-network charges in emergency situations. The couple said neither Swedish nor Regence told them before or during the two hospitalizations that Swedish was out of network, and that they never knowingly signed anything agreeing to accept out-of-network charges.

Jacob, who works as a psychiatrist at a different hospital, said he mentioned the surprise-billing laws to the Regence case manager, but she replied that the laws did not apply to his family's situation.

It was only after Regence was contacted by KHN that the insurer explained its reasoning to the reporter: Regence said the Swedish hospital, while out of network for Danielle, had a broader contract with the insurer as a "participating provider" and so the insurer was not in violation of surprise-billing laws by approving Swedish's out-of-network coinsurance charges.

The broader contract allowed Swedish to bill members of any Regence plan who receive out-of-network services there 50% coinsurance — the patient's portion of the overall cost the insurer allows the provider to charge — with no out-of-pocket maximum for the patient.

What's the difference between a hospital that's "in network" and one that's a "participating provider"? In this case, by contracting with Regence as an out-of-network but also participating provider, Swedish straddled the line between being in and out of network — designations that traditionally indicate whether a provider has a contract with an insurer or not.

Setting the terms with an insurer for providing its members emergency or other care appears to allow hospitals to sidestep new surprise-billing laws that prevent out-of-network providers from charging high, unpredictable rates in emergencies, according to government and private-sector medical billing experts.

Experts said they had not heard of out-of-network providers evading surprise-billing laws by being contracted as "participating providers" until KHN asked about Laskey's case.

Ellen Montz, director of the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, said that under the federal No Surprises Act, the definition of a "participating" emergency facility that's subject to the law's surprise-billing protections depends on whether the facility has a contract with the insurer specifying the terms and conditions under which an emergency service is provided to a plan member.

Matthew Fiedler, a senior fellow at the University of Southern California-Brookings Schaeffer Initiative for Health Policy who studies out-of-network billing, said Laskey's case seems to fall into a "weird" gray area of the state and federal laws protecting patients from out-of-network charges in emergency situations.

If there had been no contract between Regence and Swedish, the laws clearly would have prohibited those charges. But since there was a contract specifying a 50% coinsurance rate when Swedish was out of network for a particular Regence plan, those laws may not apply, Fiedler said.

After he declined to apply for the hospital's financial assistance program, Jacob said Swedish also notified them in November that they had two months to pay or be sent to collections.

Natalie Kozimor, a spokesperson for Providence Swedish, said the hospital disagreed with "some of the details and characterizations of events" presented by the Laskeys, though she did not specify what those were. She said Swedish assisted Danielle with her appeal to Regence.

"We had no luck with Swedish taking any role or responsibility with regard to our billing or advocating on our behalf," Jacob said. "They basically just referred us to their financial department to put us on a payment plan."

The Resolution: In December, the couple appealed Regence's approval of Swedish's out-of-network charges for the 51-day hospitalization, claiming it was an emergency and that there was no in-network hospital with the expertise to treat her condition. They also filed a complaint with the state insurance commissioner's office.

The office told KHN that the "participating provider" contract does not override the laws barring out-of-network charges in emergency situations. "Danielle had an emergency and Regence acknowledges it was an emergency, so she cannot be balance-billed," said Stephanie Marquis, public affairs director for the Washington state Office of the Insurance Commissioner.

On Jan. 13, Regence said it would grant the Laskeys' appeal to cover the first hospitalization as an in-network service, erasing the biggest part of Swedish's bill but still leaving the family on the hook for the $15,000 bill for Danielle's second visit and procedure.

On Jan. 27, two days after KHN contacted Regence and Swedish about Danielle Laskey's case, a Regence representative called and informed her that her second hospitalization also would be reclassified as an in-network service.

Ashley Bach, a Regence spokesperson, confirmed to KHN that both stays now will be covered as emergency, in-network services, eliminating Swedish's coinsurance charges. But in what appears to be contrary to the insurance commissioner's stance, he said the bills had not violated state or federal laws prohibiting out-of-network charges in emergency situations because of the contract with Swedish covering all its plans.

"Under the Washington state and federal balance-billing laws, the definitions of whether a provider is considered in network hinges on whether there is a contract with a specific provider," Bach said.

The Takeaway: More than a year after the federal surprise-billing law took effect, patients can still get hammered by surprise bills resulting from health plans' limited provider networks and ambiguities about what is considered emergency medical care. The loopholes are out there, and patients like Danielle Laskey are just discovering them.

Washington state Rep. Marcus Riccelli, chair of the House Health Care and Wellness Committee, said he will ask the state's public and private insurers what steps they could take to avoid provider network gaps and out-of-network billing surprises like this. He said he will also review whether there is a loophole in state law that needs to be closed by the legislature.

Fiedler said policymakers need to consider addressing what looks like a gap in the new laws protecting consumers from surprise bills, since it's possible that other insurers across the country have similar contracts with hospitals. "Potentially this is a significant loophole, and it's not what lawmakers were aiming for," he said.

Congress might have to fix the problem, since the federal agencies that administer the No Surprises Act may not have authority to do anything about it, he added.

Bruce Alexander, a CMS spokesperson, said the Departments of Health & Human Services, Labor, and Treasury are looking into this issue. While the agencies can't predict whether a new rule or guidance will be needed to address it, he said, "they remain committed to protecting consumers from surprise medical bills."

In the meantime, patients, even in emergencies, should ask their doctors before a hospital admission whether the hospital is in their plan network, out of network, or (watch for these words) a "participating provider."

As the Laskeys discovered, hospital billing departments may offer little help in resolving surprise billing. So, while it is worth contesting questionable charges to the provider, it's also usually an option to quickly appeal to your state insurance department or commissioner.

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

Copyright 2023 Kaiser Health News. To see more, visit Kaiser Health News.

Transcript

A MARTÍNEZ, HOST:

It's time for our February Bill of the Month. Dr. Elisabeth Rosenthal is editor-in-chief of our partner Kaiser Health News. Doctor, all right. Tell us about this month's patient. Who are we meeting?

ELISABETH ROSENTHAL: We're meeting Danielle Laskey from Washington state, who was about six months pregnant with her son and needed specialty pregnancy care really fast when she was snagged in what we discovered appears to be a loophole in the nation's much-vaunted surprise billing law, which was passed last year. That's the rule that's supposed to protect patients financially when they need emergency care. But in this case, the family got hit with pricey out-of-network hospital bills not once but twice.

MARTÍNEZ: OK. Reporter Stephanie O'Neill spoke with Danielle. Let's listen to her story. And after, we'll have you tell us some more about that loophole in the law.

(SOUNDBITE OF BABY COOING)

STEPHANIE O'NEILL, BYLINE: It's super early on a chilly February morning, and 6-month-old Corper Laskey is, as usual, wide awake and ready to rock. He's a happy, healthy baby, but getting him here was rough, says his mom, Danielle. Complications in the pregnancy started two months before his birth while the Laskey family was vacationing about 3 hours from home.

DANIELLE LASKEY: The first day we were there, I had this big, like, gush of fluid. And then over the course of the day, it happened one or two more times. And we started to get obviously concerned.

O'NEILL: And rightfully so. Danielle was losing the fluid that protects the fetus. Her specialist obstetricians wanted her hospitalized immediately and for the remaining seven weeks of her pregnancy. So they sent her to the only hospital where they admit patients, Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. Then about a week after giving birth, Danielle came down with fever and chills.

LASKEY: The complication that I had with my daughter, placenta accreta - that happened again.

O'NEILL: Placenta accreta occurs when portions of the placenta become embedded in the muscles of the uterus. Her doctors removed the remaining placenta, and Danielle went home the same day. All seemed great, says Danielle, until the hospital sent a bill demanding she pay $15,000 out-of-pocket for that second procedure.

LASKEY: I was like, this can't be right. They must have not sent it to the right insurance, or something was wrong. I didn't actually believe that that was the bill.

O'NEILL: Shortly after, the hospital sent her the bill for her first day, the one leading up to the birth, claiming she was on the hook for a whopping $120,000. That's when Danielle learned that Swedish Medical Center was not in her insurance network, even though her obstetricians, who are part of the Swedish Health System, were in network.

LASKEY: It never crossed my mind that it wouldn't be in network.

O'NEILL: And Danielle, herself a registered nurse, says during her weekslong stay at the hospital, no one mentioned that important detail to her.

LASKEY: We were kind of just gearing ourselves up, I think, emotionally and mentally to fight this as long as we had to and/or to sell our house.

O'NEILL: Ultimately, the Laskeys didn't have to sell their home. Danielle and her husband appealed the out-of-network classification for Danielle's first visit on the grounds that patients are supposed to be protected from out-of-network billing in emergency situations and that her seven-week stay was due to an emergency. In January, the insurer granted their request and zeroed out the $120,000 bill. But that still left the Laskeys with the $15,000 bill. For NPR News, I'm Stephanie O'Neill.

MARTÍNEZ: All right, we're back. Dr. Elisabeth Rosenthal. Wow. I mean, with the sticker shock - $120,000, then 15,000. I mean, that's just all these numbers being thrown at someone. So what happened with that second bill?

ROSENTHAL: Well, the good news is soon after our reporter reached out to the hospital and insurance company, Danielle got word that her second hospital visit was also reclassified as in-network. So those super steep bills went away for the Laskeys. A spokesman for the hospital told us they disagreed with some of the details and characterizations of events presented by the Laskeys, but they didn't tell us what those were. And in any case, the bill was zeroed out. You know, but here's the rub. The insurer, Regence, still argued that surprise billing protections didn't apply to the Laskeys' situation and that the health plan did not violate that new law in its original decision. So they kind of said, we're going to zero out the bill, but we were right.

MARTÍNEZ: Yeah because logically, it seems like maybe it did. I mean, does that bring us to the legal loophole in that law that you mentioned?

ROSENTHAL: Yeah, exactly. Usually, hospitals and doctors, as we know, are either in-network or out-of-network for your insurance plan. It's pretty black and white, right? But in this case, the hospital and insurer used a different category. They called it a participating provider, which is in a kind of gray area in between. So the federal law protects patients from bills from an out-of-network provider in an emergency. But the insurer argues the hospital was not out-of-network, even though it wasn't in-network either. Billing experts we spoke to said they'd never heard of this kind of contract before, but it's out there.

MARTÍNEZ: And that sounds like an incredibly tricky thing for a patient to navigate.

ROSENTHAL: Especially once you're sick. But unfortunately, the message is, once again, buyer beware. Even in emergencies before you are admitted, patients should ask if the hospital is in their health network and read your insurance plan paperwork. Look for that new phrase I'm hearing, participating provider, which might be an indication that you'll be on the hook for high out-of-network prices. Those words, unfortunately, may yet be another red flag for sick patients.

MARTÍNEZ: So, Doctor, does this mean that the federal surprise bill law is not working?

ROSENTHAL: Oh, no. Quite the opposite. Overall, the law is doing lots of good, protecting many, many Americans from unpredictable out-of-network pricing. But, you know, patients can still get hammered, we're discovering, especially if the provider network where you live is small or there's some ambiguity about whether the care you received was an emergency or not. So lawmakers and even billing experts are playing catch up as we kind of learn more about the new law. And critics say that providers seem to be finding ways to sidestep the spirit of the law, if not its actual words.

MARTÍNEZ: That is Dr. Elisabeth Rosenthal. Now, if you have a confusing medical bill that you want us to review, please go to NPR's Shots blog and tell us all about it. Doctor, thanks.

ROSENTHAL: Thank you.

(SOUNDBITE OF OLIVER TANK SONG, "I CAN'T SLEEP") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

300x250 Ad

Support quality journalism, like the story above, with your gift right now.

Donate