"FAIR Health" Database Will Allow People To Compare Health Care Costs

WILLIAM KATES   10/27/09 04:50 PM ET   AP

Cuomo

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Consumers across the country soon will be able to find impartial information about out-of-network health care costs on a new Web site, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday.

The information will be collected by a new not-for-profit company, FAIR Health, in partnership with a research consortium based at Syracuse University, Cuomo said.

The new database "will bring much-needed transparency, accountability and fairness to a broken consumer reimbursement system" and could benefit more than 100 million Americans nationwide, Cuomo said.

"Before you leave your house you will be able to look up the exact procedure you're going to have and you will know what the cost is, so when you get to the doctor's office, there will be no surprises for you or the doctor," Cuomo said.

The web site also will give consumers information on how much they are likely to be reimbursed by their insurance company for using doctors outside of their network, based on the costs of health care services in their area.

Health insurers are putting up nearly $100 million to develop the database, one product of a January 2009 settlement reached by Cuomo with UnitedHealth Group Inc., the nation's second-largest health insurer, the attorney general said.

Cuomo secured agreements with more than a dozen of the largest health insurers to end their use of a database developed by UnitedHealth subsidiary Ingenix Inc. They used the information to set their out-of-network payments to physicians, hospitals and other health providers.

Insurers often promise to cover as much as 80 percent of those rates for claims from providers outside their network. However, Cuomo's investigation found that Ingenix had a vested interest in helping set rates low, thus allowing companies to underpay patients for out-of-network services by as much as 28 percent.

Cuomo said the Ingenix database intentionally skewed "usual and customary" rates downward through faulty data collection, poor pooling procedures and the lack of audits.

The new database, to be operated independently by FAIR Health, will remove the conflict of interest and determine fair out-of-network reimbursement rates for consumers throughout the United States, Cuomo said. It also will be an aid to researchers and engine for health care reform, he said.

Cuomo said officials hoped to have the database and consumer Web site operating within a year.

Don Nathan, a spokesman for Minnetonka, Minn.-based UnitedHealth, said insurers have agreed to use the new database for five years.

"It's important that this information remain public, and it's good that there will be increased transparency on physician charges," he said. "That helps consumers, and that helps the health systems."

Health insurers contend the prices doctors charge for care can vary a great deal across the country.

"Hopefully this database will help shed light on the exorbitant prices that out-of-network providers are charging for some services," said Robert Zirkelbach, spokesman for the trade group America's Health Insurance Plans.

___

Associated Press writer Tom Murphy in Indianapolis contributed to this report.

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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Consumers across the country soon will be able to find impartial information about out-of-network health care costs on a new Web site, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo sai...
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Consumers across the country soon will be able to find impartial information about out-of-network health care costs on a new Web site, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo sai...
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03:24 AM on 11/02/2009
Will you be able to get data based on what the charges are in your city? If not, this won't be very useful.

But what really has me puzzled is this quote: "Before you leave your house you will be able to look up the exact procedure you're going to have and you will know what the cost is, so when you get to the doctor's office, there will be no surprises for you or the doctor". Unless they are planning on turning everyone into psychics with coding certificates, there is no way to tell a) what exact procedure you are going to have or b) what the code is for it. Since rates will be based on CPT codes, you will have to have that in order to look it up. I'm not saying it's a bad idea, I'm just saying Cuomo doesn't seem to really have a clue how it would work.

This could really be useful, but only if they do it right. Keeping my fingers crossed for them....
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Alexandre Laudet
04:57 PM on 10/28/2009
Transparency about health care costs would be most welcome and probably not just in NY state. This is a much needed initiative; the implementation is likely to encounter a good number of obstacles from the organizations whose cost structure is to be reported but as a NY state resident I cannot wait to have access to this information. Well done Mr. Cuomo!