I didn't get that from the request.  The prompt pay requirements, to my knowledge, 
have always been "pay, pend or deny."  I have never seen anything requiring a payor to 
pay a non-covered service just because the claim is "clean."  

If this closes some loopholes that have been used to delay paying legitimate claims, 
then so be it.

Joanne Marquez
Senior Director of Account Services

BEECH STREET CORPORATION

(949) 672-1519 phone
(949) 458-5323 fax
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

See what's new at the Beech!

www.beechstreet.com <http://www.beechstreet.com/> 

�



-----Original Message-----
From: Rachel Foerster [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Friday, May 03, 2002 1:11 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 'WEDi/SNIP ID & Routing'
Subject: RE: FW: Article


David,

Interesting letter from the AHA to HHS. A thorough reading of the letter makes clear 
that what the AHA is asking HHS to do is declare a HIPAA-compliant claim as a "clean" 
claim and thereby kicking in many states' prompt payment acts for clean claims. To 
date none of the state prompt pay acts define what a clean claim is.

My personal opinion is that this request has a snowball's chance of reaching any final 
rule status. If it were to do so, in effect the feds would be requiring payers to pay 
any HIPAA-compliant claim regardless of whether the services were covered services or 
not under the health plan contract - or potentially whether or not the individual to 
whom the services were rendered was even a current/eligible enrollee under a given 
health plan contract, or any other number of "business rules" that are applied during 
claims adjucation.

This could be tantamount to the feds requiring a HIBCC-compliant 810 invoice must be 
paid, or even an AIAG compliant 810, or wouldn't this be loverly...an 810 received 
from a federal supplier which complied with the fed's 810 specification.

Lastly, any potential HHS rule on this would most certainly have to supercede any 
state law, and this too makes problematic, in my opinion, that such a rule would reach 
final status.

Rachel

-----Original Message-----
From: David Frenkel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, May 03, 2002 2:43 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 'WEDi/SNIP ID & Routing'
Subject: RE: FW: Article



This is an interesting article from yesterday's AHA news.

Regards,

David Frenkel
Business Development
GEFEG USA
Global Leader in Ecommerce Tools
www.gefeg.com
425-260-5030

AHA urges HHS to require health plans to accept HIPAA claims AHA in a letter today 
urged HHS Secretary Tommy Thompson to adopt a rule or guidance requiring health plans 
to accept hospitals' claims compliant with the Health Insurance Portability and 
Accountability Act. According to the letter, one of the major administrative costs and 
sources of frustration facing hospitals is frequent claim payment delays, particularly 
by private payers. The final HIPAA regulation on electronic formats and code sets 
established national standards for electronic submission of claims, and makes clear 
that health plans are not permitted to require additional elements that deviate from 
those specified, the letter adds. Plans can be somewhat arbitrary in processing, 
leaving providers facing payment delays and engaged in "wasteful" resubmissions and 
reconciliation. The letter asks HHS to clarify that plans must accept HIPAA-compliant 
claims for contractual provisions with other entities covered under HIPAA and for 
state and federal prompt pay requirements. The letter will be at <http://www.aha.org>.






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