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- FDA warns 30 telehealth firms over compounded GLP-1 claims
- Cedars-Sinai AI tool predicts best chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer patients
- MUSC Health buys primary care group for $111M
- Why private practice will survive in the DSO era
- Rehab hospitals with the most, fewest preventable readmissions
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- ‘We’re running in when others are running out’: Stability drives record growth for regional Medicare Advantage plans
- ‘We’re running in when others are running out’: Stability drives record growth for regional Medicare Advantage plans
- Freshpaint elevates marketing chief to CEO
- California provider opens teen mental health center
- Catholic Health to outsource Epic support to Nordic
- Idaho GI group cuts appointment wait times with virtual platform
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- 6 Texas physicians to pay $5M to settle false claims allegations
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- 12 dental technology updates to know
- Imagen Dental Partners adds California practice
- South Carolina’s largest independent multispecialty group acquired
- Gastroenterology and private equity in 2026: 5 notes
- WHO calls for environmentally friendly, less invasive dental care: 5 notes
- The GI physician shortage by state, by 2036
- ASC vs. HOPD costs for 5 orthopedic procedures
- Federal lawmakers introduce bill to reverse Medicaid cuts, expand Medicare dental coverage: 4 notes
- Maryland awards $1.6M for substance use disorder, peer recovery workforce expansion
- SSM Health adds gastroenterologist
- 3 new ASCs in Florida
- Kaiser Permanente gets green light for 160K-square-foot ASC
- Mount Sinai, Saudi university partner on familial IBD research
- San Diego provider opens 32-bed residential mental health facility
- AI Therapist? It Falls Short, a New Study Warns
- Nevada hospital to downsize, switch to rural emergency status
- Mental health providers subject to ban on youth ‘transition’ procedures: Texas attorney general
- Moody’s downgrades Arkansas system’s credit rating
- Innovate 32 continues growth, adds 2 dental practices in Tennessee
- Indiana hospital transitions revenue cycle operations to Revology
- Mayo Clinic posts 6.8% margin in 2025
- Nearly 20 States Scale Back HIV Medication Programs
- BBQ Sauce Recall Issued Nationwide Due To Incorrect Label
- FDA Recalls More Than 651,000 Jugs of Water Over Sanitation Concerns
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- Patients with multiple chronic diseases are a looming threat to health systems' financials: Vizient
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- How to Get Ready For Daylight Saving Time
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- Longtime Cigna CEO David Cordani to retire, Brian Evanko tapped as successor
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- FDA’s CRLs reveal critical errors in AstraZeneca’s Saphnelo data, efficacy doubts for GSK’s Exdensur
- Even Patients Are Shocked by the Prices Their Insurers Will Pay — And It Costs All of Us
- Federal Aid for Lead Cleanup Is Receding. That’s a Problem for Cash-Strapped Cities.
- Readers Lean On Congress To Solve Crises in Research and Rehab
- Disc lays off 20% of employees to steady ship after FDA rejection of rare disease drug
- Novo plugs $500M into Ireland plant to produce Wegovy pill for markets outside US
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- The dental workforce trends that will dominate 2026
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- Children’s Mercy raises $150M for mental healthcare
- California awards $291M to expand behavioral health housing, services
- OhioHealth builds well-being programs to reshape caregiver culture
- Lawmakers introduce bill to reverse Medicaid cuts, expand Medicare benefits
- New Jersey woman charged with practicing unlicensed dentistry
- 100+ organizations call on CMS to revise 2027 MA rates
- Oklahoma advances interstate compact bill
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- FDA Approval for BIOTRONIK Solia CSP S Pacing Lead For LBBAP
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- CFO Mark Kaye to take the helm at Carelon in leadership shake-up at Elevance Health
- Insurance groups say proposed flat Medicare Advantage rates fail to meet the moment
- Stryker launches Synchfix™ EVT, expanding options for flexible syndesmotic fixation
- Stryker launches Synchfix™ EVT, expanding options for flexible syndesmotic fixation
- Democrat-Led States Sue Trump Administration Over Cuts to Childhood Vaccine Schedule
- CDC Vaccine Advisory Panel To Revisit COVID Shot Safety Next Month
CMS Rule fail: a ProPublica documentary this week drops a bombshell that should have everyone calling their congressmen.
Excerpted for length, impossible to copy all the good parts here.
The Hidden Fee Costing Doctors Millions Every Year
A powerful lobbyist convinced a federal agency that doctors can be forced to pay fees on money that health insurers owe them. Big companies rake in profits while doctors are saddled with yet another cost in a burdensome health care system.
It was a multibillion-dollar strike, so stealthy and precise that the only visible sign was a notice that suddenly vanished from a government website.
In August 2017, a federal agency with sweeping powers over the health care industry posted a notice informing insurance companies that they weren’t allowed to charge physicians a fee when the companies paid the doctors for their work. Six months later, that statement disappeared without explanation.
Insurers now routinely require doctors to kick back as much as 5% if they want to be paid electronically. Even when physicians ask to be paid by check, doctors say, insurers often resume the electronic payments — and the fees — against their wishes. Despite protests from doctors and hospitals, the insurers and their middlemen refuse to back down.
There are plenty of reasons doctors are furious with the insurance industry. Insurers have slashed their reimbursement rates, cost them patients by excluding them from their provider networks, and forced them tospend extra time seeking pre-authorizationsfor ever more procedures andbattling denials of coverage.
Paying fees to get paid is the final blow for some. “All these additional fees are the reason why you see small practices folding up on a regular basis, or at least contributing to it,” said Dr. Terence Gray, an anesthesiologist in Scarborough, Maine. Some medical clinics told ProPublica they are seeking ways to raise their rates in response to the fees, which would pass the costs on to patients.
“It’s ridiculous,” said Karen Jackson, who until her retirement in March was a veteran senior official at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, the federal agency that posted, then unposted, the fee notice. Doctors, she said, shouldn’t have to pay fees to get paid.
But that’s precisely what’s happening. Almost 60% of medical practices said they werecompelled to pay fees for electronic paymentat least some of the time, according to a 2021 survey. And the frequency has increased since then, according to medical clinics. Withmore than $2 trillion in medical claimsbeing paid electronically each year, these fees likely add up to billions of dollars annually.
Huge sums that could be spent on care are instead being siphoned off to insurers and middlemen. The fees can cost larger medical practices $1 million a year, according to an April poll by the Medical Group Management Association, which represents private medical practices. The figure sometimes runs even higher, according to a2020 complaint to CMSfrom a senior executive of AdventHealth, which has 53 hospitals in nine states: “I have to pay $1.8M in expenses that I could use on PPE for our employees, or setting up testing sites, or providing charity care, or covering other community benefits.” Most clinics are smaller, and they estimated annual losses of $100,000 or less. Even that figure is more than enough to cover the salary of a registered nurse.
The shift from paper to electronic processing, which began in the early 2000s and accelerated after the Affordable Care Act went into effect, was intended to increase efficiency and save money. The story of how a cost-saving initiative ended up benefiting private insurers reveals a lot about what ails the U.S. medical system and whyAmericans pay more for health carethan people in other developed countries. In this case, it took less than a decade for a new industry of middlemen, owned by private equity funds and giant conglomerates like UnitedHealth Group, to cash in.
How these players managed to create this lucrative niche has never previously been reported. And the story is coming to light in part because one doctor, initially incensed by the fees, and then baffled by CMS’ unexplained zigzags, decided to try to figure out what was going on. Dr. Alex Shteynshlyuger, a urologist who runs his own clinic in New York City, made it his mission to take on both the insurers and the federal bureaucracy. He began filing voluminous public records requests with CMS....
It only gets better from there.
If Frederic Bastiat hadn't invented the term, "legal plunder" in 1850, this scheme would force someone of our day to do it.
I have just one question. When they make the movie, who will they get to play Dr. Alex Shteynshlyuger?
https://www.propublica.org/article/the-hidden-fee-costing-doctors-millions-every-year
Cezary Podkul is a reporter for ProPublica who writes about finance. Previously, he worked as a reporter at The Wall Street Journal and Reuters where he specialized in data-driven news stories. His work with Carrick Mollenkamp for Reuters’ Uneasy Money series was a finalist for the Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business and Financial Journalism. He has covered energy and commodities and the private equity industry, among other beats, after leaving investment banking in 2008 to pursue journalism.
Cezary earned a B.S. in economics from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania in 2006 and is a 2011 alumnus of the Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism at Columbia Journalism School, where he won the Melvin Mencher Prize for Superior Reporting. He is fluent in Polish.
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