Skip to content
MarketScale
‹ Back to IndustriesHealthcare

Increased Billing Disputes from No Surprises Act Set a Foundation Resolutions Between Insurers and Providers

If you’re unfamiliar with the No Surprises Act, you’re probably not a hospital or insurance provider. As the Act came into effect at the beginning of 2022, patients have reaped significant cost savings with more transparent billing for medical services. But according to Chief Healthcare Executive, “hospitals and doctors say key provisions of the law…

This story was produced through MarketScale. See how Healthcare teams put it to work with Executive Thought Leadership.

Share

If you’re unfamiliar with the No Surprises Act, you’re probably not a hospital or insurance provider. As the Act came into effect at the beginning of 2022, patients have reaped significant cost savings with more transparent billing for medical services. But according to Chief Healthcare Executive, “hospitals and doctors say key provisions of the law are unfairly benefitting insurers, and are hurting providers.”

Fierce Healthcare reports that “House lawmakers are calling for the Biden administration to make provider-friendly changes on a final rule implementing the No Surprises Act, saying it doesn’t follow the law’s intent,” because the “rule tilts an independent arbitration process in the favor of insurers.”

But the House of Representatives may need to give this situation time to develop. According to Melanie Musson, insurance expert with Clearsurance, whereas dispute resolution has traditionally been a last resort, it is currently being used as a primary resolution because disputes are increased by a factor of 10x since the law came into effect. Over time, she expects the number of disputes to regress to the mean as standards for speedy resolution are developed and a foundation is created for the future.

“As with anything, when it just starts, there’s a learning curve for all involved parties and that learning curve is showing itself in the dispute process. And while this act anticipated a pretty high number of disputes, there have been 10 times what was anticipated. So that’s where the insurance provider through this process can dispute what a medical provider charges.

So instead of just doing it however they had worked it out in the past, now there’s an official process to go through. And so as you can expect with anything that is experiencing 10 times the volume of what was planned for, there’s some frustrating times. It’s gonna probably take a while to come to resolutions, but it’s worth working through right now because all this early this early dispute resolution process will set the foundation for the future so that when an insurance provider comes across something similar, they have something to look back on.

And so instead of having to go through the dispute process, they can say, ‘this is how it was resolved last time, let’s skip the process and medical provider, you need to meet us here because this has been proven to be the way that it was resolved in the past.’

The whole point of the dispute resolution process is for as a last resort, and so right now it’s being used almost as a primary resolution, but as the foundation is laid, it should become more of a last resort and insurance providers can look back on how disputes were resolved before.

Healthcare: are you visible to AI?

Before they reach out, Healthcare buyers ask AI engines which vendors to trust. See how AI describes your company today, and where competitors show up instead.

Free workspace

You just read one expert. Imagine publishing your whole team.

This article was produced through MarketScale. Create a free workspace and turn your own team's expertise into articles, video, and social posts. No credit card, no demo required.

NPS +73 · 1,000+ creators · 38+ countries

What you get, free

Your own MarketScale Studio workspace
One video edit a month, on us
AI writing, editing, and publishing tools
In-platform coaching to learn the system

More Healthcare Insights

FDA clears UpDoc's LLM diabetes app, grants Aidoc breakthrough status as clinical AI crosses new regulatory thresholds

FDA clears UpDoc's LLM diabetes app, grants Aidoc breakthrough status as clinical AI crosses new regulatory thresholds

UpDoc has received FDA clearance for its LLM-driven diabetes management app, while Aidoc has been granted breakthrough device status for its AI-drafted radiology reports. This marks a significant milestone as clinical AI applications continue to gain regulatory approval and recognition. The advancements showcase the potential of AI in improving healthcare management and diagnostic processes.

  • 01UpDoc's diabetes management app receives FDA clearance.
  • 02Aidoc achieves breakthrough device status for AI radiology reports.
  • 03Regulatory milestones highlight AI's growing role in healthcare.

Jul 13, 2026

Cedars-Sinai's CDAIO on healthcare AI's second wave: workforce transformation, not just productivity

Cedars-Sinai's CDAIO on healthcare AI's second wave: workforce transformation, not just productivity

The chief data and AI officer at Cedars-Sinai discusses the evolving role of AI in healthcare. While the first wave of AI focused on enhancing productivity, the second wave is expected to transform job roles and the workforce structure. This shift indicates a deeper integration of AI technology in healthcare operations.

  • 01First wave of AI increased productivity in healthcare.
  • 02Second wave aims to restructure job roles.
  • 03AI will deeply integrate into healthcare operations.

Jul 13, 2026

Automation adoption gap widens in US manufacturing as medtech presses ahead

Automation adoption gap widens in US manufacturing as medtech presses ahead

Automation in US manufacturing lags, with 80% of factories lacking automation tools. In contrast, medtech manufacturers are advancing with technologies like micro-molding and ultrasonic welding. This disparity highlights a growing gap in technology adoption across different sectors.

  • 0180% of US factories have no automation.
  • 02Medtech manufacturers are investing in automation technologies.
  • 03There's an increasing divide in technology adoption across industries.

Jul 12, 2026

Explore More Healthcare Insights

Read more expert perspectives from across Healthcare.

Browse Healthcare Hub

For B2B teams

Your experts could be publishing here

Stories like this one run on content MarketScale captures from real practitioners. See how your team's expertise becomes coverage in Healthcare and beyond.

Book a 15-minute demo

Or call us. No forms required. We pick up. 214-945-2512