2020 was a year of reckoning in Washington state. As the coronavirus took its toll on the state, from the first confirmed case in January, to the first death in February and beyond, the pandemic exposed the stark realities of the country’s healthcare infrastructure. Even more so, it exposed the risk that out-of-pocket costs can have on the well-being of all Americans. Across the country, COVID-19 forced the issue of surprise bills like never before, as case counts and hospitalizations rose to numbers not before seen.
Already, the federal government, with the support of Washington’s Democratic Senator Patty Murray, has taken some steps to address the issues that plague the insurance market and healthcare system. At the end of 2020, Congress enacted a law that beginning in 2022 will protect consumers from surprise bills. And now, Congresswoman Jaime Herrera Beutler, a Republican representing Southwest Washington, and Democratic California Rep. Katie Porter are looking to take steps to protect new mothers from the harm of surprise billing, with a
push for federal legislation to simplify the health-insurance enrollment process for newborns, including creating a standard 30-day coverage period under a mother’s health insurance plan, and a 60-day period to enroll a newborn in their own plan. A worthy plan that Sen. Murray should sign on to, given her support for ending surprising billing practices.
Beyond that, the state of Washington has some of the strongest statewide surprise billing rules in the entire country, with a new law on the books last year banning balance billing; executive orders banning surprise billing and lab fees for COVID-19 tests and vaccines; and a law prohibiting the sale of medical debt to a collection agency for 120 days, and reporting of debt to credit bureaus for 180 days.
The rest of the country has trailed behind Washington. Over the last year, even though COVID-19 testing and treatment is required by federal law to be covered, insurers have been finding loopholes to saddle patients with surprise bills, a practice that the federal government and regulators need to work to stop.