Saturday, 19 March 2016

Princess Health and Republicans accuse Beshear of holding down failed co-op's premiums to make Obamacare look good; he denies the charge. Princessiccia

By Al Cross
Kentucky Health News

Did Kentucky's government-sponsored insurance company fail because then-Gov. Steve Beshear and federal officials kept its rates artificially low to make Beshear's embrace of federal health reform look better?

Sen. Ralph Alvarado
That's what Republican state Sen. Ralph Alvarado of Winchester, using documents provided by Gov. Matt Bevin's office, suggested or claimed March 14 in a Senate floor speech about the Kentucky Health Cooperative.

"It appears that rates for the co-op may have been purposely kept down for the sake of optics, to make the rollout of the ACA in Kentucky appear successful when it clearly was not," Alvarado said, citing "multiple meetings between the co-op, the governor's office and CMS," the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which oversees the state-based co-ops created under the reform law, in the fall of 2014.

"Somewhere along the way rates were kept down despite these actuarial recommendations," which said the money-losing cooperative should increase its rates 35 to 40 percent for the 2015 plan year, Alvarado said. The co-op's average increase, announced in late October 2014, was 15 percent. In November, CMS expanded the co-op's $47 million solvency loan to $125 million "to try to sustain this company," he said.

Beshear denied the charges through a spokeswoman, Hayley Prim. She said in an email, "Rates were set by the co-op, which was a privately run insurance plan. Like all other insurance plans, the rates must be certified by the Department of Insurance and actuarially sound. The state did not hold rates artificially lower to improve optics."

CMS officials encouraged co-ops "to price their plans low and grow as fast as they could," Adam Cancryn reported for SNL Financial in November 2015, in a long article that is widely regarded as the best written about the failure of the co-ops. Twelve of the 23 have closed or plan to.

The insurance co-op's offices are in eastern Jefferson County.
In December 2014, the Kentucky Health Cooperative reported a loss of $50 million, "with several hazardous financial conditions indicated," Alvarado said, but that year its chief executive officer, chief financial officer and member-services vice president got bonuses of $50,000, $40,000 and $40,000 on top of their salaries of $250,000, $179,000 and $131,000.

"This company had no money, was in deficit, and yet funds were being used clearly for bonuses," Alvarado said. Its CFO, Leonard Sherman, left the company in December 2014, according to a document filed by its liquidators.

Joe Smith of Frankfort, who was chair of the cooperative's now-dissolved board, said in an interview that the salaries and bonuses were "probably a little bit less" than typical in the insurance industry. He said bonuses were paid because the co-op enrolled many more customers than expected, but no bonuses were paid after the first year.

Smith blamed "the Republican Congress" for killing the co-op and those in many other states by limiting the "risk corridor" subsidies paid to insurance companies for covering sicker-than-average populations.

He acknowledged that the Obama administration largely abandoned the co-ops, making them "a sacrificial lamb," but he said they could not effectively compete with large insurance companies, mainly because the reform law prohibited them from advertising, as the big insurers wanted. The law created funding for the not-for-profit cooperatives as a way to provide competition with for-profit insurers and hold premiums down.

Janie Miller, who was Beshear's first health secretary, resigned as CEO of the Kentucky Health Cooperative in June 2015. That October, the co-op said it had largely eliminated its losses but would close because it was getting only a $9.7 million of a $77 million risk-corridor subsidy that it needed to stay afloat. It is now in liquidation, supervised by Franklin Circuit Court.

Alvarado said Miller and her successor, Glenn Jennings, refused to appear at a legislative budget subcommittee meeting in November. He said the Insurance Department "gave us very limited answers about what happened, [which] made me wonder if any wrongdoing was involved."

Alvarado said the legislature's Program Review and Investigations Committee should examine the co-op's finances and the Senate should issue a subpoena requiring Miller and Jennings to appear.

Then-Gov. Steve Beshear,
discussing health reform at the
Brookings Institution in D.C.
Prim, Beshear's spokeswoman, said, "While it is unfortunate the co-op did not succeed, an overwhelming majority of Kentuckians have a positive view of Kynect," the online exchange where Kentuckians can buy federally subsidized health-insurance policies. "It has succeeded by providing low-cost health insurance options and creating a competitive marketplace for private insurers that have kept rates low for everyone."

In his speech, Alvarado incorrectly referred to Kynect policies as Medicaid, the federal-state health plan for the poor and disabled. Beshear expanded Medicaid eligibility to Kentuckians in households with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level.

Alvarado declined to give Kentucky Health News the documents to which he referred in his speech, saying he got them from Bevin's office, which could be asked for them.

Bevin's office provided the liquidators' first report, filed Dec. 31; an actuarial report on small-group plans for 2016, submitted in July 2015; an actuarial report on individual plans for 2015, filed in August 2014; and a February 2015 letter from Miller responding to the Insurance Department's request for a "corrective action plan." None of the documents mention the meetings Alvarado said occurred among CMS, the co-op and the governor's office.

The August 2014 actuarial report said, "The financial viability of KHC is in question. . . . KHC's projections reflect very aggressive assumptions, albeit within a reasonable range, and may result in a very optimistic view of future experience."

The co-op's members used medical services more often than it expected. In the second quarter, there were 263 hospital patient days per 1,000 members, higher than the pricing assumption of 184 per 1,000 but a still a "significant decrease" from the first quarter, for which the report did not give a figure.

The co-op was also having trouble dealing with members and health-care providers. Its corrective plan filed in February 2015 addressed complaints about such things as slow payment standards, paid premiums not being posted to members' accounts, complaints from in-network providers about being processed as out-of-network, and long waits for customer service, with supervisors not being available.

The liquidators' report to the court estimated that the co-op still owes about $80 million in claims, and their financial analysis left unclear whether all those claims would be paid. The balance sheet in the liquidators' statement, dated June 30, said the co-op had $117 million in assets and $128 million in liabilities, and the liabilities included only $67.7 million in unpaid claims. However, the co-op's biggest federal loan, of $125 million, is "subordinate to policyholder obligations, claimant and beneficiary claims, operating expenses and state reserve and solvency requirements," the report said. CMS, the federal agency, has asked an independent actuary to provide its own estimate of unpaid claims.
Princess Health and  Judge denies Bevin's bid to close Lexington abortion provider, citing difficulty that would create for Eastern Ky. women. Princessiccia

Princess Health and Judge denies Bevin's bid to close Lexington abortion provider, citing difficulty that would create for Eastern Ky. women. Princessiccia

UPDATE, June 15: A three-judge panel of the state Court of Appeals reversed the ruling.

A Lexington judge has rejected Gov. Matt Bevin's request to close the city's only abortion facility, saying that it is operating legally and that closing it would restrict access to abortions by residents of Eastern Kentucky.

Circuit Judge Ernesto Scorsone said Friday that he wouldn't issue an injunction to close EMW Women�s Clinic on Burt Road because the state failed to show that it is likely to win its lawsuit or that allowing it to stay open in the meantime would cause any irreparable injury.

�In addition to the evidence indicating that EMW is operating legally and in conformity with the most important regulations of a licensed abortion facility, closing the clinic is against the public interest,� Scorsone wrote. �EMW is the only physician�s office that routinely provides abortion services in the Eastern half of the state, and both parties agree that a right to an abortion during the first trimester of pregnancy is constitutionally protected. Closing EMW would have a severe, adverse impact on the women in the eastern part of the state.�

The clinic's attorney, Scott White, said it only performs first-trimester abortions and would reopen next week. It had closed in response to the lawsuit because of potential fines. Bevin spokeswoman Jessica Ditto said the administration would take the case to the state Court of Appeals.

The state claims the clinic needs to be licensed as an abortion clinic because that is all it does.

At a hearing Wednesday, "Clinic owner Ernest Marshall said the clinic used to do more regular gynecological health care, and is open to doing more, but he said that since his partner died a few years ago, the clinic�s primary work is abortions," Linda Blackford reports for the Lexington Herald-Leader. "On Feb. 17, state inspectors with the Cabinet for Health and Family Services visited the clinic, where they reported that employees told them the clinic only performs abortions. Inspectors also found dirty conditions and expired medicine."

Scorsone wrote that he was sure the clinic would address those issues, which typically do not lead to efforts to shut down medical facilities. He wrote, �The uncontroverted testimony presented at the hearing is that it is within the standard of care to perform first trimester abortions in a doctor�s office and that these procedures are less dangerous than others routinely performed in an office setting. The procedures used do not require sedation or the services of an anesthesiologist, factors that indicate EMW is a private physician�s office exempt from the licensing requirements for ambulatory surgical centers.�

"Scorsone said that the facility is already in compliance with the two most important requirements of an abortion clinic � that it has in place a transfer agreement with a hospital and a transportation agreement with an ambulance service in case there are complications with a procedure," Joseph Gerth reports for The Courier-Journal.

The clinic performed 411 of the 3,187 abortions reported to state officials last year. Most (2,773) were done by the EMW Women's Surgical Center in Louisville, which Marshall owns.

"The Bevin administration has targeted abortion clinics for regulatory action in the first months of his term," Gerth notes. "In February, he sought to block Planned Parenthood from offering abortions at a new clinic it opened in Louisville." That clinic has suspended abortions while the suit proceeds.
Princess Health and  Bill for review of medical lawsuits dies from special elections. Princessiccia

Princess Health and Bill for review of medical lawsuits dies from special elections. Princessiccia

A bill that would create panels of experts to review lawsuits against health-care providers is going nowhere, again.

State Senate President Robert Stivers said Friday that he and other leaders of the Senate's Republican majority sent Senate Bill 6 back to committee because last week's special elections continued Democratic control of the House. They did likewise with a bill for a "right to work" law that would ban union membership or fees as a condition of employment.

�The reality is the House does not see as the majority party in this Senate does, that right-to-work would even be another tool that could increase and expand on job recruitment and retention,� Stivers said. �The other thing is we�ve had Senate Bill 6 sitting on the board for quite some time. But, because of the elections two weeks ago, the consequences are, they would pass this chamber but die in the House.�

Friday, 18 March 2016

Princess Health and  March 18th, 2016 I'm NOT The Hero. Princessiccia

Princess Health and March 18th, 2016 I'm NOT The Hero. Princessiccia

March 18th, 2016 I'm NOT The Hero

Today was poised to challenge everything about my plan. And it did. If you read last night's edition, you know how it started. Today started last night with what I felt was a well justified nap--and to a degree it was, but would have been better had I held on a little bit longer, finished a few things and made it for the entire night--not a nap. Instead, what happened as a consequence set up a day that required sharp awareness on very little sleep.

I couldn't go back to sleep last night. That nap was solid. It was restful in every way. It totally energized me to the point of not being able to go back to sleep until after 4am. I tossed and turned--gave up, listened to an NPR podcast--turned it off, tried to shut down---still nothing. And the later it became, the more worried I was about today. I had the alarm set for 4:45am. I was up for the day shortly before 5am.

Had this been a normal day, I likely would have opted for a sick day. But we have a studio colleague out, recovering from knee replacement surgery--and I'm covering, the same as she would do for me in a similar situation. Short staffed means very little room for sick days except in the most extreme cases. And we had a big location broadcast involving two radio stations broadcasting simultaneously for four hours straight--eight breaks an hour, I had to be on top of this. Honestly--I was seriously concerned about my ability to make it all work out, today.

Before the wrong impression is communicated here--let me be clear--Today's story isn't about how strong I am or how I somehow pulled it together despite all the odds against me. No. I'm NOT the hero in this story.

The hero was the plan. It started first thing during my morning spiritual dialogue. It continued with a well defined food plan. It was supported by like minded support buddies--at the ready, communicating with me at various times throughout the day. I was tired, but sharp--which is a strange combination--and I stayed aware of the potential danger lurking if I didn't embrace the rails of my plan on this challenging day.

The food plan was important. With lunch provided at the location broadcast--an assortment of cookies, chips and high quality hotdogs--all premium items, and free to staff and customers--but not on my food plan--not free to me...I needed my plan. I planned, prepared and packed my lunch--and it was just what I needed to help me through. I leaned heavily on coffee to help me out--and although the eight breaks an hour--which translates to roughly 24 minutes of constant talking per hour--12 minutes for each station--I still made a few quick support texts during. When the broadcast wrapped--I had spent about an hour and thirty-six minutes of total talking between the two stations--in a four hour period. That's a challenge even for any well rested person. I'm grateful my voice somehow held up. That was an answer to a prayer, for sure!

I likely overcompensated on my performance. I couldn't allow anything less than a good broadcast considering the investment the client had made. And it worked well. The broadcast was a success--even acknowledged by the client in that way. And as it drew to a close, I was getting much closer to being able to get home and finally grab some more rest.

I exchanged the station vehicle for my own, made a quick grocery store run for a couple of items I needed for dinner--and another coffee, then headed back to the studio to finish up whatever needed finished in the production studio.

I made it home a little after 4pm. I quickly caught up with the teleconference support group exclusive facebook page and prepared for two quick one-on-one phone appointments. I tried to postpone the second one, but it was extremely urgent--so I went ahead and proceeded, knowing that I was minutes away from the nap I had my eye on all day long. This upcoming nap wasn't one I could regret in any way, shape or form--because the rest of my weekend is clear--no work duties--no stand-up performances---just catching up on rest and concentrating on feeling better.

"Have you been drinking?"  Obviously, by the time I reached that second call--I was starting to show significant decline in speech and clarity. No, in answer to the question on the other end of the phone--I hadn't been drinking anything but water and coffee all day. I'm not a drinker, thank God.

But I'm a food addict deluxe. And for that reason, it took this high level of care today to help me make it through. I know me--I know, without the rails of support--from the spiritual, to the food planning--to the support connections--I wouldn't have had a very good day at all. It could have been a complete disaster.

The plan was my hero.

The wrap up to this day was refreshing. I woke after an hour and a half nap--ready for a great Friday evening. I enjoyed the best cup of coffee--and settled into preparing an amazing dinner. I almost talked myself out of a late workout. But I had made an accountability commitment to get it in at some point after a good nap...and I had that good nap---and now, a great meal--and honestly, although I could have easily dismissed the workout tonight and got back in there tomorrow, I decided to get to the gym and enjoy it.

Now--had I been ready to drop back into bed--different story, but I knew I'd be up anyway--with or without the workout--and mentally, the workout simply solidified the unlikely structure of a day that easily could have been an unstructured mess of chaotic destruction. Is that a little over-dramatic? Maybe a touch. But not too far from reality.

I know myself very well. And I know--each day for me, isn't guaranteed. My success each day requires an importance level on the highest. And when my actions from the previous night are not in support of this importance level for the next day---it requires me to quickly get a grip--hold on, say a few prayers--and carefully proceed, guided by the rails of this plan. The plan that provides so much freedom in its embrace. It's interesting how my perspective was once focused on how much I thought the plan had to be restrictive or somehow burdensome and now it's a source of clarity and freedom. Very interesting to me. Very blessed. Very grateful.

My Tweets Today:


































Thank you for reading and your continued support,
Strength,
Sean

Princess Health and Bills to preserve Kynect and Medicaid expansion head for votes in Democratic House despite a likely death in Republican Senate. Princessiccia

By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News

Bills to continue the Kynect health-insurance exchange and the state's current expansion of the federal-state Medicaid program passed out of the House Health and Welfare Committee March 17, starting a series of legislative votes on health reform that once seemed unlikely.

House Speaker Greg Stumbo said he expects the bills to pass the Democratic-majority chamber, even though Republicans in the fall elections could cast votes as support for "Obamacare," the federal reforms under which then-Gov. Steve Beshear created Kynect and expanded Medicaid.

�There�s never really been a debate on this issue,� Stumbo said. �There�s not been a true letting of the facts, if you will.�

Six days earlier, Senate President Robert Stivers had more or less dared Stumbo to move the bills, whose sponsor had said he did not expect them to pass the Republican-controlled Senate, in order to "have a full, fair debate on the issue" and see where legislators stand on it.

House Bill 5 would require the state to keep operating Kynect, which Gov. Matt Bevin is starting to dismantle or transform. In his campaign, Bevin vowed to abolish the exchange, saying it did nothing that the federal exchange does not. Recently his administration announced that it would continue operating a state-based exchange but use the federal exchange for enrollments.

"They're being pushed into what everyone calls Obamacare, and they don't want that," Stumbo told reporters.

House Bill 6 would keep the current expansion of Medicaid to people with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level. Bevin is negotiating with federal officials to change the program, saying it will not be sustainable once the state has to start paying part of the cost.

Rep. Darryl Owens
The committee approved the bills along party lines. Their sponsor, Rep. Darryl Owens, D-Louisville, said he filed them because "It is important for people to understand that there are those of us in this legislature that want to continue expanded Medicaid, that want to continue Kynect."

The exchange is paid for by a 1 percent assessment on all insurance policies sold in the state. The fee formerly funded a pool for high-risk insurance, which reform made unecessary. Approximately 1.4 million Kentuckians use Kynect, all but about 100,000 of them on Medicaid.

Kynect was started with federal grants. Rep. Robert Benvenuti, R-Lexington, argued that the state must include that $273 million when considering its cost. "I think most people in this room, most people in Kentucky, pay federal taxes as well, so this whole notion that there is a great federal money tree in which we can go pick off of and build things is just not correct," he said.

Owens replied, "I'm not saying it's a money tree, I'm just saying it's a grant that the federal government gave the states if they wanted to develop their own system," Owens said. "And I think the thing we miss when we talk about that is we have a great system; we have the best system in the country."

Rep. Tim Moore, R-Elizabethtown, whittled the definition of Kynect down to a business that advertises and markets Medicaid and health insurance to Kentuckians, and asked, "How do you spend that kind of money to go out and build a marketplace for soliciting folks to do what would be in their own interest anyway?"

Cara Stewart of the Kentucky Equal Justice Center said the marketing has value because it has created a brand that Kentuckians recognize and trust, allowing them to know where to go to get health insurance. She said Kynect runs seamlessly to help Kentuckians shop and enroll in coverage for both Medicaid and federally subsidized insurance plans, unlike Bevin's approach.

She said later that it now takes two minutes to reach customer service on Kynect and two hours on Benefind, which is operated by the state Department of Community Based Services. "We are radically changing the quality of service to Kentuckians," she said.

Rep. Tim Moore
Moore said he was glad the bills would be voted on because Kynect and the Medicaid expansion had been created through "dictatorship," not "the will of the people." Beshear acted under a state law that requires the government to get as much federal money as possible for Medicaid, and he used his broad executive powers under the state constitution to transform the high-risk pool into Kynect.

Moore said Bevin's election showed public opinion on the issue. However, a poll in November, after the election, showed Kentuckians supported the Medicaid expansion by 3� to 1 and keeping Kynect by 2 to 1.

Democratic Rep. David Watkins, a retired physician from Henderson who voted for both bills, said, "It is kind of sad that our citizens don't pay attention to what our politicians are saying because they do have consequences."

Democratic Rep. Joni Jenkins of Louisville, chair of the House Budget Subcommittee on Human Services, said her panel's hearings convinced her that the state needs to keep it. She said there is value in having one system for Kentuckians to access health insurance, and to have Kynectors, who not only help people access health insurance, but also help them access health services.

Emily Beauregard, executive director for Kentucky Voices For Health, said after the meeting that navigating health insurance is difficult, especially for those who have never had it. "We need to help connect people to a source of care and help them understand how to use their benefits and that's what we've been able to do through Kynect," she said. "Coverage alone is not going to solve Kentucky's health issues."

Benvenuti said after the meeting, "There are various ways to get people to health care and creating a huge governmental system that is duplicative of the federal system is simply not the best use of our dollars."

As for Medicaid, Benvenuti said, "We've got to create a system where everybody who gets health care through an expansion population, or however you want to define it, has skin in the game and is responsible ultimately for their own health care."

Thursday, 17 March 2016

Princess Health and  March 17th, 2016 Better, All Together. Princessiccia

Princess Health and March 17th, 2016 Better, All Together. Princessiccia

March 17th, 2016 Better, All Together

I really pushed myself today and I paid for it with my voice. The sore throat wasn't as bad, but the more I used my voice in the course of a busy workday, the quicker it deteriorated--to the point of significant decline. For someone in my profession, this is a serious issue! I've been taking it easy--and maybe a little too easy, tonight--when what was to be a short nap once again turned into something bigger, completely wrecking my plans for a workout at the gym followed by an early bedtime. My voice did need the rest. But I know, it would have been better, all together--not broken up into two long naps, which is basically what I'm doing.

Food wise, I handled today very well. It was well planned, on point and felt really solid. I had a midday broadcast--and I'll have another tomorrow that's even more challenging by being twice as long with four times the amount of on-air breaks. Four times. I'm hoping my throat/voice can meet the challenge. The steroid shot at the urgent care did help, I'm certain.

I was originally scheduled for fasting blood work this morning. That appointment was made long ago--and before today's scheduled midday broadcast. The smartest move for me, today, was deciding to reschedule that blood work for early next week. As it turned out--I had plenty to do after my morning show and before my location broadcast--and a morning lab appointment wouldn't have fit well in the schedule.

I'm overwhelmed with excitement about the next ten week session of the support group I'm co-facilitating with Life Coach Gerri and Kathleen Miles. We're almost completely full. The last check revealed three open spaces for our Tuesday night conference call. That's it! The Tuesday night session is at 7pm Central/8pm Eastern/5pm Pacific.

If you're interested in discovering the difference a concentrated accountability and support team can make, I highly recommend you joining us! The call is once a week. But the majority of the accountability and support takes place on our secret Facebook page that's visible only to group members. Our Facebook page combines Monday and Tuesday night group members, too! That's where we all interact daily. In other words--this group is so much more than a weekly call! Couple that with text & call spot-support with facilitators and fellow team members--and it's a fairly comprehensive well-rounded approach.

The group is made up of members at every mile marker along this road. Some are just getting started, some just hit goal or are near goal and are now making the transition into maintenance mode. Wherever you are--100, 200 pounds or more to lose or 40, or even less--this group can be a fantastic tool for you! It's proven successful for many members, past and present. Here's the link for the Tuesday night registration:
http://lifecoachgerri.com/events/0322-accountability-support/
Also--email me directly with any questions: transformation.road@gmail.com

It's Throwback Thursday!! The Tulsa World newspaper has included me in a few feature stories over the years. The stage shot below goes all the way back to a story they published in 2001 about my stand-up comedy and more specifically about New Years Resolutions. Years later, they published a big spread about my blog and weight loss. They've been very kind to me!
 photo IMG_9489_zpsvrbvok7e.jpg
"Stand-Up Comedy-Then and Now" #TBT Side By Side comparison. Photo credits: Tulsa World and Tera Leiter.

I don't have very many pictures of me doing stand-up at over 500 pounds. This is one of the very few--or two, that exist--or that I know of existing. I just wasn't too open about pictures at my heaviest--which seems strange considering the amount of before pictures I seem to have at the ready. The excessive amount of before pics are largely due to some wonderful family members who loved/love taking pictures--even when I wasn't exactly thrilled about being in the pictures. Now I'm thankful for what they've contributed to my archives--namely my Aunt Kelli, whose contributed the most. Here's a request--any friends and family with old before pictures of me on stage doing stand-up, please let me know! I'd love to have a copy.

I better attempt to go back to sleep. I feel somewhat justified in my destructive approach to my schedule this evening in the name of taking care of this sickness thing. Of course, this could be the side of my brain that tries to rationalize all potentially negative choices into a nice pretty little box. Too bad I can't take tomorrow off, or I would. But I'll make it fine--and the weekend is fairly clear of work responsibilities--so I'll have more time to catch up and take extraordinary care.

My Tweets Today:




























Thank you for reading and your continued support,
Strength,
Sean

Princess Health and Patients may be liable for big bills from air ambulances; state House panel approves bill calling for study of companies' charges. Princessiccia

Air ambulance services have enabled rural Kentuckians to get advanced emergency care more quickly, but there's a catch.

"Increasingly, the service also can mean the difference between getting well at a price you can afford or at a price that could push you over a financial cliff," Trudy Lieberman writes for Rural Health News Service. "Air ambulances have become the centerpiece of a nationwide dispute over balance billing, a practice that requires unsuspecting families, even those with good insurance, to pay a large part of the bill."

On Wednesday, March 16, the state House Banking and Insurance Committee approved a bill calling for a study of air-ambulance charges. House Bill 273 was sponsored by Rep. Tom McKee, D-Cynthiana, "after a constituent of McKee�s was transported to the hospital via air ambulance after a fall, but it was an unexpected bill for thousands of dollars not covered by insurance which really knocked him off his feet," Don Weber reports for cn|2's "Pure Politics."

Rep. Tom McKee
"McKee says having more information about emergency care transportation may have allowed the individual to avoid the high cost," Weber reports, quoting him: �I have learned in looking at it that certain air-ambulance companies provide a subscription service for perhaps as little as $50 a year, that you can have coverage to know if you need to be transported, the full cost would be paid. As we move forward, I think we�re going to learn a lot more to at least inform people.�

McKee said the charges, which can run well into five figures, may seem huge �but those air-ambulance companies have to keep people on duty and have to have a full crew ready to go at a moment�s notice. But, I think as citizens, we all need to know where we are in regard to being transported and things like we�ve learned, a subscription service could be available.�

Some committee members said they want to see if the charges are justified. �It�s nice to know what the cost is, $40,000, but if it only costs them $8,000 to do it,� said Rep. Steve Riggs, D-Louisville. �So we have to learn more than just what the average retail cost is, we have to also learn more about what the profit margin is.�

Lieberman reports that your air-ambulance bill may not be covered "because the provider is not in your insurer�s network," but "Sometimes it�s impossible to tell if a provider belongs to a network or not. When you are wheeled into the operating room, are you going to ask the anesthesiologist if he or she belongs to the hospital�s network? How many accident victims suffering from trauma are going to direct EMS workers to check if the air service is in or out of network before they�re lifted to a hospital? You can also get stuck even if the ambulance company is in the network. An insurance payment may not come close to covering the cost.

�Rates ambulance companies charge private patients are much more than they are charging to Medicare or Medicaid,� whose rates are too low to suit the companies. Consumers Union Programs Director Chuck Bell told Lieberman. �The air ambulance industry has grown rapidly, and prices have shot up a lot with some companies trying to make a quick buck.�