Too Little Too Late - Transparasy Will Uncover Tax Evasion In Healthcare Industry

Trump Administration Releases Transparency Rule in Hospital Pricing

  • Too Little Too Late - Transparasy Will Uncover Tax Evasion In Healthcare Industry

District of Columbia, United States Nov 18, 2019 (Issuewire.com)  - The Trump Administration's Department of Justice is now in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims to defend the Internal Revenue Service of not collecting taxes on the illegal kickbacks being paid by the health care providers to the insurance companies for listing the provider as being in-network. This transparency move by the Federal Government may be in response to that lawsuit?

Trump Administration Releases Transparency Rule in Hospital Pricing
By

Stephanie Armour of Wall Street Journal
Updated Nov. 15, 2019, 9:00 am ET


The Trump administration on Friday released a far-reaching plan that would for the first time force hospitals and insurers to disclose their secret negotiated rates.
Administration officials said the final rule will compel hospitals in 2021 to publicize the rates they negotiate with individual insurers for all services, including drugs, supplies, facility fees and care by doctors who work for the facility.
The administration will propose extending the disclosure requirement to the $670 billion health-insurance industry. Insurance companies and group health plans that cover employees would have to disclose negotiated rates, as well as previously paid rates for out-of-network treatment, in file formats that are computer-searchable, officials said.
The insurers, including Anthem Inc. and Cigna Corp., would have to provide a transparency tool to give cost information to consumers in advance, senior administration officials said.
The requirements are more far-reaching than many industry leaders had expected and could upend commercial health-care markets, which are rife with complex systems of hidden charges and secret discounts. The price-disclosure initiative has become a cornerstone of the president’s 2020 re-election health strategy, despite threats of legal action from the industry.
“Right now there is too much arbitrage in the system,” a senior administration official said in an interview Thursday with The Wall Street Journal. “There are a ton of vested interests who will oppose this. We expect to get sued. We’re really goring people’s boxes.”
How could information from insurers and hospitals be helpful to you if this plan goes into effect? Join the conversation below.
Hospitals and insurers typically treat specific prices for medical services as closely held secrets, with contracts between the insurers and hospital systems generally bound by confidentiality agreements. Policymakers, employers and patients are often unable to see clearly which hospital systems and doctor practices are driving high costs.
The proposal covering insurers is the newest part of the price-disclosure initiative, and it would include the private-employer market, where about 158 million people get their health insurance. Insurers and group health plans would have to put the negotiated rates into a file that third-party developers could incorporate into shopping tools.
Insurers would also have to create a web-based tool for beneficiaries that discloses the list price, the negotiated rate, cost-sharing, and the amount left on a plan deductible, as well as allowable out-of-network rates, officials said. There will be a 60-day public comment period on the proposal.
Studies show consumers are often required to pay more out of pocket when they don’t have the price information they need to comparison shop. Employer health-plan deductibles are outpacing wage growth and have risen to an average $1,655 for a single plan, according to a September survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Workers on average pay $6,015 toward the cost of their coverage.
On the final rule covering hospitals, facilities would have two obligations. First, they will have to provide insurer-specific negotiated rates in a computer-readable file.
Second, hospitals will have to post negotiated charges online for 300 specific services that patients typically shop around for. Seventy of those services, including vaginal birth, colonoscopy, and joint-replacement surgery, are stipulated in the rule, according to senior administration officials. Hospitals can select the other 230 services they post online.
Hospitals face fines of up to $300 a day if they don’t comply with sharing negotiated rates.
Taken together, the price-disclosure initiatives could reshape the $3.5 trillion health-care industry.
Prices charged for health care vary widely depending on whether a provider is in or out of the patient’s insurance network and on the insurer’s undisclosed price agreements with hospitals. A magnetic resonance image of the lower back costs $141 at an imaging center in Jefferson, La., but $7,646 at a hospital in Torrance, Calif, according to data from Clear Health Costs, which publishes information on health costs.
Hospitals, insurers and others in the industry have spent the past nine months since the idea was floated by the White House denouncing the proposal and gearing up for a pitched legal battle.
The industry is also likely to argue in any legal challenge that negotiated rates are proprietary and include confidential contractual agreements. Industry groups have also said it runs counter to the First Amendment.
Pharmaceutical companies prevailed with a similar argument when the Trump administration said they had to disclose list prices for drugs in television ads. A federal judge in July ruled that the requirement overstepped regulatory authority.
“It will have a negative impact on competition,” said Tom Nickels, executive vice president of the American Hospital Association, though he hadn’t yet seen the final rule.
If rates are public, health-care companies say, some hospital systems might push for payment rates that match their crosstown rivals’.
Proponents argue it would bring costs down. Out-of-network doctors could try to compete with in-network negotiated rates. Health systems that charge higher negotiated rates could lose business if they don’t match competitors’ rates or justify the reasons for their steeper costs. And employers could press their insurers to include hospitals with lower negotiated rates in their networks.
Employers and patients are often unable to see which hospital systems and doctor’s offices are driving prices upward. Some health-care economists argue that secrecy is a factor in why the U.S. spends more per resident on health care than any other developed nation.
The administration’s vision is to arm patients with information needed to make health-care decisions much like shopping for other consumer services. Rates potentially could be posted on public websites, where consumers would check the negotiated price of a service before they pick a provider.
The White House push on price disclosure comes as President Trump seeks to close the gap with Democrats, who hold an advantage on health care in public polling.
President Trump has stated that under his health-care plan, Americans will get better care at a lower cost than they currently pay. About three in 10 adults are very or somewhat confident the president will deliver on his promise, while 62% say they aren’t too confident or not at all confident, according to an October poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation.
The White House is prepared to defend the rule and the proposal covering insurers from lawsuits, a senior administration official said. Officials said authority for the requirements stem from the Public Health Service Act.
“You’ll be able to negotiate all over the place,” Mr. Trump said in an October speech in Florida. “And you’ll be able to pick everything you want, from the hospital to the doctor. And it’s going to save you a tremendous amount of money.”

Description of Tax Evasion Scheme in The Healthcare Industry

https://www.issuewire.com/description-of-tax-evasion-scheme-in-the-healthcare-industry-1649317228204670

The IRS has given the Healthcare Industry 1.5 trillion dollars and added 1 trillion dollars to the U.S. national debt!

This description of the tax evasion scheme deals with health care providers and insurance companies that are on the accrual method of accounting, not the cash method of accounting, for tax purposes. The tax evasion scheme deals with two separate financial transactions for privately insured patients, the first is the creation of the private-pay patients’ debt and the second is tax evasion kickback scheme between the provider and the private insurance company. The loss of tax revenue is over 1.5 Trillion Dollars a year. ......

Click on the link for a full discussion of the tax evasion scheme.

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