ACEP to Congress: Enforce the No Surprises Act
ACEP issued a statement last month in support of the No Surprises Enforcement Act, legislation that would hold insurance companies accountable for continued and willful violations of the federal law designed to keep patients out of the middle of billing disputes between payers and providers.
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ACEP Now: August 2025 (Digital)“This legislation takes critical steps to level the playing field and stop insurer bad practices,” said ACEP President Alison Haddock, MD, FACEP. “Insurers consistently refuse to play by the rules, doing all they can to delay payments, or in some cases are outright failing to meet their obligations under current law. This bill will hold bad actors accountable and stop their dangerous, irresponsible abuse of the system.”
With the No Surprises Act (NSA), Congress established a viable framework for resolving payment issues between insurers and physicians that takes patients out of the middle of billing disputes.
However, insurers continue to exploit loopholes and undermine the law, stalling payments and creating dangerous delays that threaten the continued viability of physician practices and patient access to care, especially in rural and underserved communities.
The No Surprises Enforcement Act would make critical improvements to enforcement of existing laws, stopping a pattern of insurer bad behavior so that the NSA can work as Congress intended.
It establishes the same civil monetary penalties for insurance companies as those that already exist for practitioners and imposes penalties for late or non-payment after losing the independent dispute resolution process laid out in the NSA. Importantly, this legislation does not affect existing patient protections, nor does it raise out-of-pocket costs.
This bipartisan, bicameral legislation (H.R.4710/S.2420) is led by Reps. Greg Murphy, MD (R-NC), Jimmy Panetta (D-CA), John Joyce, MD(R-PA), Raul Ruiz, MD (D-CA), Bob Onder, MD (R-MO), and Kim Schrier, MD (D-WA), and Sens. Roger Marshall, MD (R-KS) and Michael Bennet (D-CO).
ACEP Webinar Series Discusses Effects of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act
ACEP is strongly opposed to the drastic changes to Medicaid, including stricter eligibility rules, work requirements, and a $1 trillion reduction in spending over the next decade, that are part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), which was passed by Congress in late June and signed into law last month.
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One Response to “August 2025 News from the College”
August 31, 2025
Daniel SchwerinThough the principle of EMTALA is appropriate, the United States of America is the only country that has an unfunded mandate from the federal government to hospitals and emergency departments. Likewise patients have “learned” of this process and therefore utilize the emergency department for their primary health care.
ACEP needs to fight for a change in the unfunded portion as well as in the education of individuals on the importance of the “emergency” department. This also includes education to primary care physicians on appropriate use of the emergency department ND encouraging primary care physicians to have extended time to see patients.