• Am J Emerg Med · Sep 2017

    The risk of unintentional out-of-network encounters with hospital-based physicians at in-network hospitals.

    • Lawrence H Brown, Robert A Weston, and John E Gough.
    • Emergency Medicine Residency Program, Department of Surgery and Perioperative Care, University of Texas-Austin Dell Medical School, Austin, TX, USA; Mount Isa Centre for Rural & Remote Health, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia. Electronic address: LHBrown@seton.org.
    • Am J Emerg Med. 2017 Sep 1; 35 (9): 1228-1233.

    ObjectiveWhen hospital-based specialists including emergency physicians, anesthesiologists, pathologists and radiologists are not included in the same insurance networks as their parent hospitals, it creates confusion and leads to unexpected costs for patients. This study explored the frequency with which hospital-based physicians at academic medical centers are not included in the network directories for the same insurance networks as their parent teaching hospitals.MethodsWe studied teaching hospitals with residency programs in all four hospital-based specialties. Using insurance plan provider directories, we determined whether each teaching hospital was in-network for randomly selected locally available insurance plans offered through the federal and state marketplace exchanges. For each established hospital-network relationship, we then determined whether hospital-based specialists were included in the provider network directory by searching for the name of each specialty's residency program director and the name of the physician practice group.ResultsWe identified 79 teaching hospitals participating in 144 locally available insurance plan networks. Hospital-based specialist inclusion in these hospital-network relationships was: emergency physicians: 50.0% (CI: 40%-59%); anesthesiologists: 50.0% (CI: 42%-58%); pathologists: 45.4% (CI: 37%-54%); and radiologists: 55.1% (46%-64%). Inclusion of all four hospital-based specialties occurred in only 45.0% (CI: 36%-54%) of the hospital-network relationships.ConclusionFor insurance plans offered through the federal and state marketplace exchanges, hospital-based specialists frequently are not included in the directories for the insurance networks in which their parent teaching hospitals participate. Further research is needed to explore this issue at non-academic hospitals and for off-exchange insurance products, and to determine effective policy solutions.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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