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Life After Helene: The Ever-Widening Health Disparity in Appalachia

On December 2, 2024
Well before Hurricane Helene, one of the deadliest storms in modern American history, ripped through Western North Carolina earlier this autumn, decimating scores of residences and businesses and washing away entire neighborhoods, the largely impoverished Appalachian region was grappling with a precarious healthcare infrastructure. To this day, Asheville, North Carolina, and its surrounding mountainous communities have never fully recovered from the devastation of the Great Recession of 2008, resulting in a grave health disparity among other societal ills. And, yes, the recent ferocious tempest of which Western North Carolina bore the brunt has only exacerbated the region’s already fragile healthcare system.

New Requirements Under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (“MHPAEA”)

On November 20, 2024
The deadline to comply with several of the new final rules regarding the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (“MHPAEA”) is quickly approaching. On September 9, 2024, the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS), Labor, and the Treasury released new final rules that updated existing regulations to provide additional clarity for plans and their vendors on what is required and what will be considered compliant and non-compliant for parity purposes when performing a nonquantitative treatment limitation (NQTL) comparative analysis.

Navigating Balance Billing and Post-Payment Disputes: Solutions for TPAs and Self-Funded Employers

On November 14, 2024
As rising healthcare costs continue to challenge employers and third-party administrators (TPAs), Reference-Based Pricing (RBP) has emerged as a powerful strategy for cost containment. However, RBP, while promising, is not without its pitfalls. Chief among them is balance billing, in which providers charge patients for the difference between their billed charges and the RBP plan’s payment. Additionally, the No Surprises Act (NSA) has introduced Open Negotiations and Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) processes, which, while protecting patients, expose employers to post-payment disputes. Addressing these concerns effectively requires comprehensive tools, support, and strategic implementation.

Having NSA Problems? Better Call The Phia Group

On October 31, 2024
The Independent Dispute Resolution (“IDR”) process was designed to be a cornerstone of the No Surprises Act (“NSA”), a means for resolving claims for payment for out-of-network items and services and a vital mechanism for buttressing the NSA’s protection for plan members against potentially devastating balance billing expenses. Unfortunately, since the NSA took effect on January 1, 2022, things have gone awry on many fronts.

The Future of Birth Control in America

On October 28, 2024
Since the US Supreme Court decided to undo nationwide abortion rights in summer 2022, women’s reproductive rights has arguably been the most pressing topic in healthcare. Naturally, as we enter the final stretch of election season – as well as the Biden administration – the all-important, polarizing matter has resurfaced.

Cobenfy: A Potential Game-Changer for Schizophrenia Patients – But at What Price?

On October 9, 2024
As you’re reading this blog, millions worldwide are suffering from the horrors of schizophrenia, one of the most complex, debilitating, and stigmatized mental disorders inflicted on humanity, the symptoms of which typically manifest themselves in early adulthood, though they are not always so easy to detect. Those afflicted by this condition are desperately trying to manage an array of frightening symptoms (hearing voices, delusions, memory lapses to name a few) while carrying on with their lives. In this country alone there are approximately 2.8 million Americans living with schizophrenia; tragically, many of those 2.8 million Americans won’t be living much longer as there is a particularly acute rate of suicide among people battling schizophrenia. Meanwhile, so many others suffering often experience prolonged bouts of homelessness and/or run afoul of the law. And for decades, pharmacological innovation has moved at such a glacial pace that treatment has largely yielded inadequate improvement in symptoms and/or intolerable side effects during therapy that many have felt inclined to discontinue usage.

Healthcare and Politics… Ugh. Old News!

On September 27, 2024
Donald Trump recently stated that while he will never give up on repealing the ACA, he also said that he was not running on terminating the ACA. This is likely a smart decision, given that a recent Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) poll revealed that for Republican voters, repealing Obamacare was an important issue for a very small percent of respondents. Is this demonstrative of a more widespread loss of interest in health care as a political talking point?

The First Ten: Medicare Unveils Inaugural List of Negotiated Drug Prices

On September 16, 2024
Last month, while many of us were busy vacationing or doing last-minute back-to-school shopping, the Biden administration announced that it had reached an agreement with the titans of the pharma industry to lower prices on the 10 costliest prescription drugs under Medicare, thus bringing to fruition Democrats' decades-long push to allow the government to negotiate directly with pharmaceutical manufacturers. While individual plans had previously been able to haggle over prices with Big Pharma, this development marks a seminal moment as it is the first time that Medicare used its clout to be able to negotiate for the program as a whole.

Section 1557 Final Rule: Where Do We Stand?

On August 30, 2024
The implications of the Section 1557 Final Rule are currently in flux since the Final Rule was issued on April 26, 2024. The purpose of the Final Rule was to extend the protections against discrimination in healthcare, with a particular emphasis on gender identity. The inclusion of gender-affirming care within the protection against sex discrimination was a huge step forward in strengthening the scope of Section 1557 beyond what was originally afforded when the rule first passed.

Healthcare in Rural America

On August 19, 2024
Whether it’s met with great anticipation or utter dread, summer will soon be giving way to autumn. For many people living in picturesque New England, where The Phia Group is headquartered, seasonal change means an upcoming weekend of leaf-peeping. But when we’re checking out apple orchards and roadside maple sugar shacks, it’s easy to forget the sobering reality: life isn’t always so sweet for residents in these one-stoplight rural outposts as many face imposing barriers to healthcare.

Health Over Wealth

On August 5, 2024
In 2017, New York Times medical journalist Dr. Elisabeth Rosenthal published “An American Sickness: How Healthcare Became Big Business and How You Can Take It Back.” It quickly became one of this century’s most influential healthcare books, enlightening the masses about the corporate greed embedded in a trillion-dollar industry, one that is ostensibly grounded in altruistic endeavors.

What the Overturning of Chevron Means for Healthcare

On July 19, 2024
For the past forty years, federal agencies have had considerable latitude to interpret and enforce regulations and subsequently advance regulatory initiatives. Per the precedent established in the Supreme Court’s 1984 decision in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, courts have had to defer to federal agencies regarding legal challenges over ambiguously written laws passed by Congress. The rationale was as follows: The public servants employed by the federal agencies, whether they be scientists, engineers, law enforcement officials, economists, or experts in another field, have more specialized expertise in the given matter – even more so than Supreme Court justices -- and should thus be accountable for implementing the law. But effective late last month, the High Court, believing that unelected government officials should not wield such tremendous influence, overturned that precedent, thus yielding unprecedented power to the courts to use their own discretion in interpreting laws – many of which pertain to the country’s healthcare ecosystem.

The Supreme Court and State Bans on Gender-Affirming Care for Minors: What’s Next?

On June 26, 2024
Samantha and Brian Williams of Nashville are no different from any other parents in that they want what’s best for their 15-year-old daughter. The Williams’ situation, however, is different from that of many parents as their child identifies as transgender while residing in a state that restricts access to puberty blockers, hormone therapies, and surgeries for minors undergoing gender transitioning. Per the American Civil Liberties Union, the Williams’ daughter is one of approximately 3,000 transgender adolescents in Tennessee where, by law, medical providers cannot perform procedures that “enable a minor to identify with, or live as, a purported identity inconsistent with the minor’s sex” or “treat purported discomfort or distress from a discordance between the minor’s sex and asserted identity.”

Direct Contracting and Occam’s Razor

On June 21, 2024
Maybe I should be, but I’m not ashamed to admit that when I first heard of Occam’s Razor, I assumed it had something to do with shaving. Whatever the context, many know Occam’s Razor as a principle of decision-making holding that “the simplest explanation is the best one”. Although the real idea is similar, William of Ockham’s logic is a bit more formulaic than that. To paraphrase, Occam’s Razor suggests that when choosing between multiple options, the best choice is the one that requires the fewest assumptions to reach. Put another way, the best option is the one that has the highest likelihood of actually being the case, by requiring the fewest assumptions to achieve it.

Implications of the Section 1557 Final Rule

On June 17, 2024
The non-discrimination protections of Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act are not new, as the Affordable Care Act was originally enacted in 2010. However, the recent Final Rule published on May 5, 2024, provided clarification and additional requirements as they relate to strengthening civil rights protections for individuals.
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