Listen on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Stitcher, Vimeo, YouTube.
The No Surprises Act (NSA) will go into effect on January 1, 2022. Since our last episode on the topic, the federal government has issued additional interim final rules and guidance to implement the NSA, including the second interim final rule. In addition to describing how the NSA interacts with the plan external review procedures, the second interim final rule describes the independent dispute resolution (IDR) process and how the IDR's determination is made.
On this episode of Diagnosing Health Care, attorneys Helaine Fingold, Lesley Yeung, and Alexis Boaz dive into how these changes impact entities subject to the NSA’s balance billing prohibitions.
Stay tuned for an upcoming follow-up episode, which will discuss the NSA’s good faith estimate requirement.
About the Diagnosing Health Care Podcast
What health care and life sciences decision-makers need to lead, comply, and compete. The health care industry is full of high-stakes legal, policy, and regulatory obstacles. And significant opportunities for those prepared to act on them. Diagnosing Health Care® delivers the intelligence executives, general counsel, and administrators need to navigate both. Part of the Epstein Becker Green Insights Network.
Email Notifications
Follow Us
Never miss an episode! Subscribe to Diagnosing Health Care on your preferred platform:
Also on Audible | Deezer | Goodpods | iHeartRadio | PlayerFM | Pocket Casts | YouTube Music