Why Hospitals Are Still Gouging the Uninsured

Two recent posts have discussed out of control prices for hospitals’ services, especially in ERs. The first argued that sky-high hospital prices are the result of government interference. The second cheered the fact that consumer-driven health plans are inducing hospitals (ever so gradually) to be more upfront with patients (at least, those coming in for scheduled surgeries) about how much they will have to pay out of pocket, and agreeing on payment plans before admission.

untitledObamaCare promises to come to the rescue of uninsured patients who are charged outrageous prices by hospitals. Statutory language purports to limit hospitals’ charge to uninsured patients in the ER to “not more than the lowest amounts charged to individuals who have insurance covering such care”. Hospitals which fail to adhere to this policy risk losing their non-profit status. (The relevant text is on page 739 of the enrolled version of the bill here.)

Hospitals take threats to their non-profit status very seriously. So, since the law was passed in 2010, you might expect that the overcharging of uninsured patients has long since stopped. You would be wrong. Like everything else in ObamaCare, this has malfunctioned.

In Time magazine, Steven Brill reports that hospitals continue to levy exorbitant charges on uninsured patients presenting at ERs, and accuses the Administration of “bungling the easy stuff.” Well, the “stuff” is never “easy” when the federal government gets involved.

First, as Brill notes, the IRS cannot just declare hospitals to be for-profit corporations. The Treasury Department has to promulgate rules to make the statute operational. Although the Federal Register published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on June 26, 2012, here, it has never finalized the rule.

However, the provision against hospitals’ price gouging did not just take on water in the rule-making stage. The statute itself is wholly toothless. The price control is not applicable to all uninsured patients, but only those who are eligible under a “financial assistance policy.” (Yes, this is referred to in the proposed rulemaking by a new acronym, “FAP.” The price control is referred to as the “amount generally billed” or “AGB.” Half the fun of health policy is tracking the acronyms!)

Eligibility for the FAP is determined entirely by each hospital. As clarified in the rule: “Consistent with the statute, the proposed regulations do not mandate any particular eligibility criteria and require only that a FAP specify the financial assistance, including all discounts and free care, available under the FAP and all of the specific eligibility criteria that an individual must satisfy to receive each such discount, free care, or other level of assistance.”

So, each hospital is free to define the FAP cut-off so low that nobody, not even the homeless, could qualify. (On the other hand, the proposed rule also regulates the means by which these FAP is communicated to patients: “Measures could include, for example, conspicuously posting signs and displaying brochures.” So, once everyone is signed up for ObamaCare, I suppose the “navigators” will be re-employed to measure the signs and counting the brochures in ERs, to make sure the hospitals are in compliance.)

The fundamental problem here is not that the federal government has “bungled the easy stuff” but that the government asserts the power to dictates hospitals’ charitable care at all. Hospitals, addicted to government funding, have lost their moral compass. Let’s not forget that most American hospitals were founded by religiously affiliated civic leaders in the 19th century, with a specific charitable mission. Until they free themselves of government dependence, and rediscover the purpose for which their forbears established them, no law will force American hospitals to stop overcharging the uninsured.

Comments (12)

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  1. Trent says:

    “ObamaCare promises to come to the rescue”

    What a joke

  2. Wally says:

    “Hospitals take threats to their non-profit status very seriously. So, since the law was passed in 2010, you might expect that the overcharging of uninsured patients has long since stopped. You would be wrong. Like everything else in ObamaCare, this has malfunctioned.”

    The ship is sinking quickly

  3. Lucas says:

    “So, once everyone is signed up for ObamaCare, I suppose the “navigators” will be re-employed to measure the signs and counting the brochures in ERs, to make sure the hospitals are in compliance.)”

    Well once the navigators try to get jobs with background checks they’ll be unemployed anyways

  4. Bob Hertz says:

    Hospitals do continue to levy enormous charges on the uninsured, and they continue to forgive a large portion of those charges.

    This probably helps the hospitals meet their charitable care reporting statutes.

    Also at least 5 states have enacted laws which officially limit such charges.

    If the Obama admin had any guts in 2009, they could have pushed for the nationwide adoption of what exists in the good states (IL, MN, CA, CO, Ct, I think)

    But no, the fiction was that everyone would soon be insured and this problem would go away.

  5. Bart says:

    “First, as Brill notes, the IRS cannot just declare hospitals to be for-profit corporations.”

    They’re trying to!

  6. Tim says:

    “Half the fun of health policy is tracking the acronyms!”

    Amen to that.

  7. Bob Hertz says:

    Note to Lucas:

    You seem to take pleasure in the idea that navigators would be unemployed once they had to go through background checks.

    Well, there is a lot of job discrimination against people with bad credit and misdemeanor convictions. There are plenty of persons who have long since paid their legal dues, and yet find it very hard to get decent jobs.

    I am not talking about child molesters trying to get jobs driving school buses.

    This comment is not on point with health care, I just felt compelled to criticize what seems like your smugness.

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