Post by ck4829 on Nov 20, 2022 11:32:40 GMT
Hospitals Often Don't Help Needy Patients, Even Those Who Qualify
Nonprofit hospitals must have financial-assistance policies for needy patients, under federal requirements tied to an estimated $60 billion in annual tax breaks. They often make that aid hard to get. Hospitals put up obstacles, delay checking eligibility and sometimes press for payments that aren’t refunded even if a patient eventually gets qualified for assistance. That is according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of thousands of nonprofit hospital policies in filings to the Internal Revenue Service and posted by hospitals, as well as thousands of pages of internal documents from government hospitals obtained through public-record requests and the experiences of dozens of advocates and patients who have applied for aid.
(snip)
Among the Journal’s findings:
•Though hospitals have the power to prequalify low-income patients for charity care and never send a bill, about 450 nonprofit facilities—roughly 15% of the 3,100 nonprofit facilities in the Journal’s analysis of tax documents—didn’t report using the option.
•Even among the hospitals that told the IRS they do prequalify people, many spent months chasing patients for payment before checking eligibility. The parent organizations for roughly 1,000 of those facilities reported pursuing at least $2 billion in billings to patients who likely qualified for aid.
•In scripts and other training material for staff who talk to patients about bills, obtained through public-record requests to more than 100 government hospitals, the possibility of financial assistance is sometimes raised only as a last resort, or not at all.
(snip)
Ms. Harrison’s experience started when she went to the Advocate South Suburban emergency room near Chicago late on Dec. 20, 2019. Then 30 years old, she was weak, unable to eat and had difficulty breathing. She was diagnosed with a possible case of acute promyelocytic leukemia, according to physician notes, and later transferred to another hospital. Her brief stay at Advocate South Suburban generated a big bill: $36,733.13. She had two forms of insurance—Medicaid and a private plan—but neither covered the cost. Ms. Harrison said the private plan told her the hospital was out of its network. A spokeswoman for the Illinois Medicaid agency said it retracted its payment at the request of the hospital. In a written statement, she said, “there can be lots of honest, good-faith complications with claims,” but that the patient shouldn’t have been billed.
(snip)
After The Wall Street Journal requested comment on Ms. Harrison’s case in September, she said Advocate Aurora reached out to request an additional document, then informed her that financial assistance would cover her entire bill. In a written statement, a spokesman for Advocate South Suburban called the denial a mistake, citing a change in its record system, human error and her insurer’s decision not to cover the care. “While we continue to express our apologies to our patient for her initial experience, we are thankful to have resolved this situation and provided financial assistance,” the hospital spokesman said. He said the hospital has “invested in technology and made policy changes to make it easier to access financial assistance.”
(snip)
The thousands of pages of procedures, scripts and other training material for hospital staff give an inside look at how some hospitals routinely push patients toward payment, including through installment plans that may come with interest. The guidelines often play down or don’t raise the option of financial assistance. Adding to the pressure, these tactics are often deployed before the patient gets care. In a document titled “Collections Scripting for Non-Emergent Visits,” used by Georgia-based Augusta University Health System, staffers are supposed to start by requesting the entire amount due from the patient, saying, “How would you like to take care of that today?”
If the patient can’t afford to pay, the hospital system representative requests 75% of the sum. Then half. Then a quarter, along with a payment plan for the rest, and a warning that the “minimum deposit is required to proceed with your scheduled service.” If the installments for a six-month plan are too large, the staffer can offer longer plans with interest. Only if the patient refuses all of these does the script suggest mentioning financial assistance. If the person wants to apply for assistance, and the medical appointment is within one or two days, the staffer is told to reschedule it. This would delay the appointment rather than let it proceed without payment.
More..
www.wsj.com/articles/nonprofit-hospitals-financial-aid-charity-care-11668696836 (subscription)
Nonprofit hospitals must have financial-assistance policies for needy patients, under federal requirements tied to an estimated $60 billion in annual tax breaks. They often make that aid hard to get. Hospitals put up obstacles, delay checking eligibility and sometimes press for payments that aren’t refunded even if a patient eventually gets qualified for assistance. That is according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of thousands of nonprofit hospital policies in filings to the Internal Revenue Service and posted by hospitals, as well as thousands of pages of internal documents from government hospitals obtained through public-record requests and the experiences of dozens of advocates and patients who have applied for aid.
(snip)
Among the Journal’s findings:
•Though hospitals have the power to prequalify low-income patients for charity care and never send a bill, about 450 nonprofit facilities—roughly 15% of the 3,100 nonprofit facilities in the Journal’s analysis of tax documents—didn’t report using the option.
•Even among the hospitals that told the IRS they do prequalify people, many spent months chasing patients for payment before checking eligibility. The parent organizations for roughly 1,000 of those facilities reported pursuing at least $2 billion in billings to patients who likely qualified for aid.
•In scripts and other training material for staff who talk to patients about bills, obtained through public-record requests to more than 100 government hospitals, the possibility of financial assistance is sometimes raised only as a last resort, or not at all.
(snip)
Ms. Harrison’s experience started when she went to the Advocate South Suburban emergency room near Chicago late on Dec. 20, 2019. Then 30 years old, she was weak, unable to eat and had difficulty breathing. She was diagnosed with a possible case of acute promyelocytic leukemia, according to physician notes, and later transferred to another hospital. Her brief stay at Advocate South Suburban generated a big bill: $36,733.13. She had two forms of insurance—Medicaid and a private plan—but neither covered the cost. Ms. Harrison said the private plan told her the hospital was out of its network. A spokeswoman for the Illinois Medicaid agency said it retracted its payment at the request of the hospital. In a written statement, she said, “there can be lots of honest, good-faith complications with claims,” but that the patient shouldn’t have been billed.
(snip)
After The Wall Street Journal requested comment on Ms. Harrison’s case in September, she said Advocate Aurora reached out to request an additional document, then informed her that financial assistance would cover her entire bill. In a written statement, a spokesman for Advocate South Suburban called the denial a mistake, citing a change in its record system, human error and her insurer’s decision not to cover the care. “While we continue to express our apologies to our patient for her initial experience, we are thankful to have resolved this situation and provided financial assistance,” the hospital spokesman said. He said the hospital has “invested in technology and made policy changes to make it easier to access financial assistance.”
(snip)
The thousands of pages of procedures, scripts and other training material for hospital staff give an inside look at how some hospitals routinely push patients toward payment, including through installment plans that may come with interest. The guidelines often play down or don’t raise the option of financial assistance. Adding to the pressure, these tactics are often deployed before the patient gets care. In a document titled “Collections Scripting for Non-Emergent Visits,” used by Georgia-based Augusta University Health System, staffers are supposed to start by requesting the entire amount due from the patient, saying, “How would you like to take care of that today?”
If the patient can’t afford to pay, the hospital system representative requests 75% of the sum. Then half. Then a quarter, along with a payment plan for the rest, and a warning that the “minimum deposit is required to proceed with your scheduled service.” If the installments for a six-month plan are too large, the staffer can offer longer plans with interest. Only if the patient refuses all of these does the script suggest mentioning financial assistance. If the person wants to apply for assistance, and the medical appointment is within one or two days, the staffer is told to reschedule it. This would delay the appointment rather than let it proceed without payment.
More..
www.wsj.com/articles/nonprofit-hospitals-financial-aid-charity-care-11668696836 (subscription)