WASHINGTON—Some people without health insurance will begin getting bills for Covid-19 treatments and testing after the Biden administration on Tuesday starts winding down a federal program that reimburses providers for virus-related care for the uninsured and that officials say is running out of funds.
The White House says it will end the reimbursement program, which started under the Trump administration and also pays hospitals and other healthcare providers for things such as administering Covid-19 vaccines to uninsured people, by the end of April because it is running out of money. The administration and hospitals are urging lawmakers to approve more funding for the program.
The White House earlier this month pushed for $22.5 billion in Covid-19 funding to pay for a range of programs, including the provider-relief funds and replenishing supplies of vaccines and antibody drugs. Congressional Republicans have called to repurpose Covid-19 money that states haven’t yet spent, but a number of House Democrats have balked at using money promised to states.
The provider relief fund, which was created to help hospitals and community health centers seeing decreased revenue or increased expenses because of the pandemic, was launched with more than $100 billion in 2020, and later legislation added about $78 billion. All of the money in the provider relief fund has been allocated, though it has not all been paid out, according to an official with the Department of Health and Human Services’ Health Resources and Services Administration.
About 50,000 hospitals, doctors and other providers have submitted claims requesting funding from the uninsured program since April 2020, the federal official said. The program bars providers who receive the funding from billing the uninsured for the difference between the money they get and the costs of treatment, a practice known as balance billing.
In total, about $20 billion from the relief fund has helped cover providers’ costs for administering vaccines, testing and treatment for people without health coverage.
The administration said it will stop accepting claims for treatment and testing for uninsured people Tuesday, and the deadline for claims for administering vaccines is in two weeks.
After that, the medical bills for uninsured Covid-19 patients will depend on each hospital’s financial-aid policy and their prices, both of which can vary widely from one hospital to another. Financial aid is offered by most hospitals and is usually granted based on patient income, but hospitals largely choose their own cutoffs for eligibility. Some states set requirements. Prices for the same services are also sharply different across hospitals, with the uninsured often facing the highest prices.
The White House said it notified Congress in February that the fund that reimburses doctors and other medical providers for caring for uninsured individuals would stop taking new claims in March.
Hospitals that have relied on the funding say they are still feeling the financial squeeze of the pandemic and that more funding is needed for the uninsured program.
“We support the administration’s request for additional funding to ensure that the healthcare system has the resources it needs to continue to care for their patients, especially as we continue to…
Read More: Biden Administration to Stop Reimbursing Hospitals for Covid-19 Care for Uninsured