'This legislation reflects our commitment to patients and health care transparency, and I'm proud to see the progress we've made to better protect Hoosiers when they need it most.'
Gov. Eric Holcomb ceremonially signed into law legislation authored by State Rep. Brad Barrett (R-Richmond) to stop Hoosier patients from receiving surprise bills after out-of-network ambulance rides.
Barrett said individuals can receive large ambulance bills because the service provider was not covered by their insurance. Barrett authored House Enrolled Act 1385 to require health insurance companies to reimburse for ambulance services that are not part of a person's coverage plan.
"Ambulance services are critical to all Hoosiers but when insurance rejects a claim, patients are stuck with a huge balance," said Barrett, who serves as chair of the House Public Health Committee. "This legislation reflects our commitment to patients and health care transparency, and I'm proud to see the progress we've made to better protect Hoosiers when they need it most."
The new law also allows for out-of-network ambulance providers to receive payments from health insurance operators at locally set rates or at a capped rate based on Medicare benchmarks. Before, there was no set time frame in which an ambulance service must receive payment from health plan providers. Under this new law, service providers must receive payment within 30 days of the claim being filed.
For more information on House Enrolled Act 1385, visit iga.in.gov.
Suspect charged with kidnapping after 3-month-old recovered safely in multi-agency operation
3-month-old infant safely recovered in Merrillville following Marshall County Abduction Alert
3-month-old infant safely recovered in Merrillville following Marshall County Abduction Alert
Plymouth Community Schools implements bell-to-bell cell phone ban beginning this fall
Plymouth Police make 3 traffic-related arrests over Independence Day weekend
Marshall County Deputy locates stolen vehicle, arrests driver on drug and license charges
Marshall County Commissioners face public pushback over Automated License Plate Reader Cameras
Potawatomi Wildlife Park invites community to overnight campout this Friday
