One critic said Rep. Richard
Neal, the Democratic chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, is
"actively helping private equity-owned doctor groups rip off and destroy
the lives of people at their most vulnerable."
Tuesday, December 17, 2019
Rep. Richard Neal, Democratic
chairman of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, teamed up with a
Republican ally last week to effectively torpedo bipartisan legislation that
aimed to curb surprise medical bills—a major source of financial pain for people
who experience medical emergencies and other serious ailments.
Last Sunday, the House Energy
and Commerce Committee and the Senate Health Committee announced a
bipartisan agreement on legislation to shield the U.S. public from the
"devastating financial toll of surprise medical bills."
The chairmen of the two
committees, Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) and Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.),
expressed hope that the legislation would be included in the must-pass spending
legislation Congress is expected to approve by Friday.
But Neal, who has received
tens of thousands of dollars in campaign donations from a private equity
group opposed to
the Pallone-Alexander measure, had other plans.
Three days after Pallone and
Alexander announced their agreement, Neal and Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Tex.), the
top Republican on Ways and Means, countered with
a more industry-friendly plan that would place billing decisions in the hands
of a third-party arbiter, an idea favored by
powerful hospital and doctor groups.
The Hill reported last
Friday that surprise billing legislation will not be in the year-end spending
measure, which does
include big tax breaks for the healthcare industry.
"With the key committees
in the House pushing competing ideas, leadership is waiting until next
year" to act on surprise medical billing, The Hill noted.
Neal and Brady's announcement
of competing legislation sparked outrage among members of Congress and outside
progressives who said delaying action on surprise billing until 2020 could kill
any hopes of a solution.
"Every day that goes by
is another loss for America's families and another win for private
equity," said Shawn Gremminger, senior director of federal affairs for
consumer group Families USA. "The primary committees of jurisdiction have
been negotiating a deal for months and now there is a bipartisan, bicameral
bill on the table that has the support of the White House and can pass by Dec.
20."
Freelance journalist Jon
Walker said that
by thwarting the effort to curb surprise medical billing before the end of the
year, Neal is "actively helping private equity-owned doctor groups rip off
and destroy the lives of people at their most vulnerable."
"Let's be clear about
what is happening," Walker tweeted. "Democrats pretend they want to
improve healthcare and when they have a chance they take the side of wealthy
for-profit companies with the most ghoulish business practices
imaginable."
Surprise medical bills often
come after a patient receives treatment from a doctor or hospital outside the
network covered by their insurance plan.
Under the Pallone-Alexander
agreement, the New York Times reported,
"doctors who provide care that is out-of-network for a patient's insurance
[would] automatically be paid the median price of in-network doctors in the
area" instead of the exorbitant prices under the status quo.
Hospital and doctor groups
backed by private equity have spent
millions of dollars lobbying against congressional action to tackle
surprise medical billing, worrying that legislation could cut into their
profits.
Blackstone Group, a private
equity firm that owns the physician staffing organization TeamHealth, donated $29,000
to Neal's 2020 reelection campaign this year, according
to the Center for Responsive Politics.
A spokeswoman for Sen. Maggie
Hassan (D-N.H.), who worked on the Senate Health Committee proposal, told The
Hill that it is "extremely disappointing that now, at the eleventh
hour, turf wars in the House and corporate special interests appear to be
standing in the way of passing these vital protections for patients into
law."
Rep. Greg Walden (R-Ore.)
expressed similar disappointment. "You wonder who made the call to stop
our bill, but clearly the best interest of the patient is not at heart,"
Walden told The Hill.
Others said House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) shares a portion of the blame for failing to overrule
Neal.
"Nancy Pelosi allowing
Rep. Neal to kill surprise billing protection to pay back his big [private
equity] donors is the most disgusting story in D.C. right now," said Walker.
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