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AMA Releases Health Insurer Code of Conduct Principles


 

The American Medical Association on May 25 called on U.S. health insurance companies to adopt its just-issued code of conduct.

The Health Insurer Code of Conduct Principles evolved out of a resolution put forward and unanimously adopted by the AMA House of Delegates at its 2008 Interim Meeting. The New York Delegation called on the AMA to develop such a code, get insurers to sign on, and come up with a way to monitor compliance. The code has already been endorsed by nearly every state medical society as well as 19 specialty societies, according to the AMA.

It has been 15 years since the insurance industry issued any kind of internal standards, according to the AMA, adding in a statement that the industry has had a “questionable” record of compliance with those standards, known as the Philosophy of Care.

“The health insurance industry has a crisis of credibility,” Dr. J. James Rohack, AMA president, said in the statement. “With the enactment of federal health reform legislation, it's time for insurers to recommit to patients' best interests and the fair business practices necessary to reestablish trust with the patient and physician communities.”

America's Health Insurance Plans, the industry trade organization, did not directly address the AMA code. AHIP spokesman Robert Zirkelbach said many of the principles are covered in the health reform law—the Affordable Care Act.

“Health plans have pioneered innovative programs to reward quality, promote prevention and wellness, coordinate care for patients with chronic conditions, streamline administrative processes, and provide policyholders with greater peace of mind,” Mr. Zirkelbach said.

The code's principles address topics such as cancellations and rescissions; medical loss ratios andcfair premium calculations; open access to care, including transparent rules on provider networks and benefit limitations; fairness in contract negotiations with physicians; medical necessity and who can define it; and a call for more administrative simplification, fewer restrictions on benefits, and better risk adjustment mechanisms for “physician profiling” systems.

Physicians should also have more opportunity to review and challenge their ratings in those systems, according to the principles. The systems are used to select physicians for preferential networks.

The AMA said that it has written to the eight largest health insurers seeking their pledge to comply with the code.

For details, visit www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/advocacy/current-topics-advocacy/private-sector-advocacy/code-of-conduct-principles.shtml

'The health insurance industry has a crisis of credibility' and must reestablish trust with patients.

Source DR. ROHACK

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