A Georgia federal court has dismissed a lawsuit against HaloMD, a provider of Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) services, marking the company’s third consecutive legal victory against insurers’ coordinated campaign to intimidate providers through frivolous litigation.
Background
Judge Thomas W. Thrash, Jr., of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, dismissed with prejudice every single claim brought by Blue Cross Blue Shield Healthcare Plan of Georgia (BCBS Georgia) against HaloMD and one of the provider groups it represents.
The Court rejected BCBS Georgia’s attempt to weaponize federal and state law to collaterally attack HaloMD, the provider community, the No Surprises Act (NSA), Independent Dispute Resolution Entities (IDREs), and the legally binding awards issued under Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR).
Court Findings
The Court concluded that high provider win rates are not evidence of fraud but, more plausibly, evidence of the insurer making systematically low payment offers to providers. The Court noted that it is highly improbable to infer from the facts that there is a vast conspiracy of providers and IDREs that have conspired to defraud the insurer of millions of dollars in thousands of NSA IDR proceedings over many years.
Instead, the Court found it highly plausible to infer that the insurer engages in a consistent practice of submitting lowball offers to out-of-network providers in an effort to maximize its profits.
Implications
This is the third near-identical lawsuit filed by insurers that has been dismissed against HaloMD and its provider clients. Insurers have deployed a coordinated playbook designed to intimidate providers, burden them with costly litigation, and coerce them into accepting low payments.
HaloMD supports healthcare providers navigating the federal No Surprises Act and state balance-billing laws, combining proprietary technology, advanced analytics, and deep specialty expertise to advance fair reimbursement, long-term financial sustainability, and empowering care teams to focus on providing high-quality patient care.
Original reporting: KTBS 3 (Shreveport) — read the source article.