Quick! Nuke the site from orbit, just to be sure!
The Biden administration issued an interim rule aimed at ending the evil ugly practice of surprise medical billing Thursday, following up on a law passed by Congress back in December. The new rule, released by the departments of Health and Human Services (HHS), Treasury, and Labor, will go into effect on January 1, 2022, and should largely eliminate surprise medical billing, at least for people with health insurance through their employers, or who buy individual plans on the private market.
So what the hell is surprise medical billing? It occurs when somebody uses medical services that would be covered by their insurance, but which involves some part of service that — surprise! — is actually out of network, and billed at an insanely high rate. For instance, someone might make sure their planned surgery is done at an in-network hospital, by an in-network surgeon, but — surprise! — the anesthesiologist that day is out of network, and the patient is billed for tens of thousands of dollars. This practice has gotten much much worse as private equity firms have taken over American healthcare, because the whole point is to extract as much money as possible from patients, fairness be damned. Cory Doctorow has an excellent Twitter thread on how it all works, go read it, you.
As part of last year’s big omnibus budget bill, Congress passed the “No Surprises Act,” which authorized HHS to enact rules to put the kibosh on surprise medical billing. The resulting 411-page rule still needs to go through a routine 60-day public comment period and other administrative steps, but it’s not likely to be modified much, because public support for reining in the practice is so strong. Let’s take a look at how this sucker will work!
Fierce Healthcare has the skinny…
The rule would also forbid insurance plans from requiring prior authorization for emergency services, regardless of whether the policyholder goes to a hospital that’s in network or not, or whether the providers of the emergency services are in or out of network.
So if suddenly you are run over by a truck, you will no longer be expected to emerge from your concussed state and tell the EMTs to take you to an in-network hospital, or to call your health insurer’s call center to authorize treatment before they sew your leg back on. And even if an assistant surgeon scrubs in, you can’t be billed more than the co-pay you’d have to pay for in-network treatment.
The rules will also limit how much can be charged for air ambulance services in emergencies, another huge source of surprise billing.
Again, this is a hell of a big change, and will reduce one of the biggest drivers of medical costs in our god damned for-profit medical system.
This is a big fucking deal.
Holy shit, this is like ULTRA important, we need this so badly



















