Sunday, September 22, 2024
HomeTop StoriesAllina cancels controversial policy that denied care to those with debts

Allina cancels controversial policy that denied care to those with debts

Published on

spot_img


Allina Health will no longer block patients with delinquent medical debts from making non-emergency appointments.

The controversial practice had been put on hold this summer, but the Minneapolis-based health system announced Wednesday that it would pursue other strategies to help patients resolve overdue bills.

“We have determined there are opportunities to engage our clinical teams and technology differently to provide financial assistance resources for patients who need this support,” according to a written statement from the health system.

Allina had initially defended the practice as a last resort to motivate patients to apply for financial assistance or pay bills — after repeated mailings and phone calls about their debts. The policy was triggered if patients had at least $4,500 in unpaid bills from three separate medical encounters.

The health system isn’t alone in using the practice in Minnesota, where a special agreement between hospitals and the state Attorney General restricts how they can collect debts. HealthPartners and Mayo Clinic have also required patients in rare cases to pay overdue bills before scheduling non-emergency care.

Glencoe Regional Health was prepared to deny non-emergency care to a delinquent patient after she give birth, but a Star Tribune report on her plight prompted people to make donations that more than covered her medical debts.

Allina became nationally notorious for the practice after a report in the New York Times, which prompted Attorney General Keith Ellison to launch an investigation over whether it also violated the state hospital agreement. Ellison also is seeking to gain a broader understanding of the pressures patients face when they can’t pay their bills, and scheduled a listening session Wednesday night to hear from them.

See also  Jungle Theater's 'Rich Dogs' has lots of barks, no bite

“My office has heard from a good number of Allina patients who have shared their own upsetting stories of being denied care for this reason,” he said in a statement.

The controversy came at a dicey time for Allina, which like many large Minnesota health systems has posted revenue declines since the COVID-19 pandemic. It also has been contesting a vote earlier this year by inpatient doctors at Mercy Hospital in Coon Rapids to unionize, and is facing a similar vote by more than 500 of its outpatient clinicians across Minnesota.

The health system will also need state political support next year to build a new 100-bed inpatient rehabilitation hospital, with plans to open it by 2026.

The comparative severity of the medical debt problem in Minnesota is unclear. The Urban Institute used data from a credit agency to estimate that 2% of Minnesota adults have medical debts in collections, compared to 13% nationally.

Minnesota has a lower poverty and higher insured rate, which likely explains some of the discrepancy. But under their special agreement with the attorney general, Minnesota hospitals also are prevented from reporting debts to credit agencies.

So the state’s low reported rate reflects mostly overdue bills for outpatient care, and doesn’t show the full scope of the problem.

Allina in its statement did not specify its new strategies for connecting patients with financial assistance and resolving debts, but cases involving inpatient care will be bound to the state hospital agreement. It requires that hospitals charge discounted rates to uninsured patients, and refrain from abusive or coercive collection practices.

See also  Port Charlotte man facing child molestation charges



Source link

Latest articles

Estadounidenses podrán recibir pruebas de COVID-19 por correo gratis – San Diego Union-Tribune

WASHINGTON (AP) — A partir de este mes los estadounidenses podrán pedir pruebas...

7 California Lottery players win combined $30 million – here's where they bought their tickets

$3M lottery ticket bought in LA about to expire An unclaimed...

Watch Neil Young Debut New Band the Chrome Hearts at Farm Aid

Three months after calling off his summer tour with Crazy Horse due...

Does Cooking in Cast Iron Add More Iron to Your Diet?

If you’re searching for a cast iron expert, I think I qualify....

More like this

Estadounidenses podrán recibir pruebas de COVID-19 por correo gratis – San Diego Union-Tribune

WASHINGTON (AP) — A partir de este mes los estadounidenses podrán pedir pruebas...

7 California Lottery players win combined $30 million – here's where they bought their tickets

$3M lottery ticket bought in LA about to expire An unclaimed...

Watch Neil Young Debut New Band the Chrome Hearts at Farm Aid

Three months after calling off his summer tour with Crazy Horse due...