ICYMI: Legislation to Prevent Surprise Ambulance Billing Passes Committee
DENVER, CO – The Senate Health and Human Services Committee passed legislation to protect patients from surprise ambulance billing yesterday.
HB25-1088, sponsored by Senator Kyle Mullica, D-Thornton, would build upon previous bipartisan legislation to protect patients from surprise ambulance billing by extending protections to public ambulance services.
“No Coloradan should hesitate to call an ambulance during an emergency because they are concerned about the cost,” said Mullica. “Existing law creates an uneven playing field where some ambulance rides are protected from surprise billing while others are not – but patients have no say over who responds to their 911 call. HB25-1088 protects consumers and establishes clear, fair reimbursement rates to support the sustainability of ambulance services across Colorado.”
Colorado’s existing billing protections only include private ambulance services, yet more than 75 percent of ambulance agencies in Colorado are public departments, not covered by current law.
This bill would also put key federal Advisory Committee on Ground Ambulance and Patient Billing (GAPB) recommendations in place, such as:
Prohibiting all ambulance agencies from balance billing patients for both emergency and non-emergency transports,
Establishing reimbursement rates for ambulance services that are out of network,
Requiring carriers to pay the rates adopted by governing political subdivisions, assuming those rates meet conditions designed to improve transparency and limit costs,
Creating a public-facing website of rates adopted by political subdivisions, and
Ensuring ambulance agencies are paid directly after a transport.
HB25-1088 now heads to the Senate Appropriations Committee for further consideration. Track its progress HERE.