The No Surprises Act (NSA) places regulatory requirements on health providers and insurers. It’s designed to protect consumers from unanticipated and high-cost payments for out-of-network emergency treatment by prohibiting balance billing. Additionally, it provides consumers with the right to a good-faith cost estimate (GFE) before scheduled services and access to the Patient Provider Dispute Resolution Process (“PPDR”).
Join us, along with our cohost, Moss Adams, for the second segment of this two-part series, The No Surprises Act, Part Two: The Good Faith Estimate and Patient Provider Dispute Resolution. We’ll cover key elements of the NSA, areas of risk, as well as the following topics:
- The ever-changing implications and compliance requirements of the NSA
- Key strategies to prepare and stay compliant
- Unintended consequences of the NSA and gray areas that impact health care providers
People
Related Insights
26 April 2024
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Increased Tariffs on Imports of Selected Products
As an additional measure to those taken last year, the Federal Government again modified the Law of General Import and Export Taxes (Ley de los Impuestos Generales de Importación y Exportación) in order to provide fair conditions to national industry and prevent bad practices in international trade, promoting the development of national industry and supporting the domestic market to balance the situation faced with the global market that has taken place as a consequence of the nearshoring phenomenon.
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Non-Competes: What the FTC’s Rule May Mean for Health Care & Life Sciences Providers
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03 May 2024
Events
Takeaways from the Trenches: the JetBlue/Spirit Merger Trial
Foley Partner Ben Dryden will moderate a panel for the ABA State Enforcement and the Mergers and Acquisitions Committees as they host a panel consisting of both enforcers and private practitioners, who will discuss the JetBlue/Spirit merger and what this decision may mean for the future of merger enforcement, including in the airline industry.