Anesthesia Policy Draws Ire and Confusion

Anesthesia Policy Draws Ire and Confusion

I want to cover a story that was spectacularly overshadowed by the recent assassination of former CEO for UnitedHealthcare Brian Thompson.

The story is the announcement by Anthem that it would change anesthesia reimbursement in February 2025.

Shortly after the Thompson killing Anthem withdrew its policy due to what the Associated Press reported as “significant widespread misinformation” about the policy. Anthem went on to say, “it never was and never will be the policy of Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield to not pay for medically necessary anesthesia service. The proposed update to the policy was only designed to clarify the appropriateness of anesthesia consistent with well-established clinical guidelines.”

Were this true then Anthem would have served itself better by sharing and explaining the guidelines rather than rescinding the policy in a hasty retreat. Anthen has left skeptics to believe the policy was a predatory money grab rather than a fiscally responsible approach to fostering medically sound resource utilization.

For those who haven’t heard the policy proposed to deny anesthesia reimbursement in some markets for claims with time exceeding a specified value. As a reminder, anesthesia claims are paid as base units plus time units. Each unit has a contractually controlled dollar value. The combined based plus time units, times the unit value should be the reimbursement. 

Anthem proposed denying claims that had time units exceeding a predetermined value. Naturally, as well it might be expected there was immediate backlash.

The inherent unfairness of the proposed policy is evident from two facts. First, anesthesia providers have little control over the duration of a surgical procedure.  Second, patients and surgeons uniformly find that stopping the anesthesia prior to the conclusion of the surgery is an unsatisfactory outcome.  So there’s no acceptable way to stop the surgery when the Anthem meter runs out.

Let’s look at some of the expected outcomes of Anthem’s policy.

  • First, providers would recognize this as a significant contract change and exercise their cancellation options. This would in turn exacerbate the current shortage of anesthesia providers. The most severely impacted providers would be those who care for sicker patients or those who provide care for prolonged, complicated, or highly specialized procedures.
  • Next, the loss of providers would be expected to disproportionately impact the sickest patients who need complex surgeries. Anthem’s actuaries certainly recognize that delaying the surgery may eliminate the need for the surgery and associated complex treatments.
  • Next, out of network cases would require single case agreements for elective care.
  • Low-risk surgeries might be expected to shift to ambulatory surgery centers where payers may have better margins.
  • Finally, some providers may begin anticipating denials and attempt to pre-emptively shift the risk to patients. Providing timely good-faith estimates and, possibly, front-end deposits shift financial responsibility to the patient and mitigates the need for appeal of denied claims. Or more accurately shifts the appeal obligation to the patient. This also increases administrative burden for practices.

Shifting payment burden is a common practice in contracting. Medicare Advantage and marketplace payers routinely “shift” payment responsibility. Payers generously offer 110-115P of Medicare knowing it they will simply increase premium and shift more reimbursement to patient responsibility.

A colleague recently told me of a marketplace plan with a 75percent co-pay. That’s not insurance. Such techniques in conjunction with denials for services already completed reliably drives actual Medicare Advantage reimbursement down to 88-92percent of Medicare rates. Yet providers continue to return to Dante’s 3rd circle of hell to systematically erode margin.

In one sense Anthem’s policy was genius.

The payment changes only affect an “invisible” group of providers who are rarely hand-picked by patients. Anesthesia providers suffer under frivolous internal disputes between physicians and non-physician providers. This fractured front provides a particularly easy target for reimbursement reductions. The diverse provider group and the fact that the average anesthesia physician income last year exceeded $400K assures that these providers will get little sympathy.

Anthem’s brilliance extends to patients. The policy was disclosed first to providers. Most patients don’t pay attention to reimbursement policy changes. Patients who know of reimbursement changes assume it won’t affect them.

Besides, patients are unlikely to care if their “overpaid” anesthesiologist gets “stiffed” on a single case?

Did Thompson’s murder drive Anthem to reconsider? We may never know. But, as I noted previously, Thompson has the potential to be the poster boy for meaningful financial change in healthcare financing.

As a start we should consider the following:

  • Seek to eliminate vacuous promises from payers. Patients and providers should insist on robust contracts that limit the ability of payers to deny and delay coverage or payment.
  • Demand clear, honest advertising. Stop luring patients to MA plans using washed-up, geriatric, previously famous celebrities to talk about frivolous “benefits” that will have no positive impact on health.
  • Insist that MAs eliminate “cash back” and other programs not directly related to healthcare.
  • Demand that MAs disclose denial rates in an understandable manner to every beneficiary and contracted provider.

A significant component of the frustration with health insurance is the apparent failed promises and the crushing heartless bureaucracy. The health insurance industry has an opportunity to re-invent itself into something positive and still make billions in profit.

Maybe Thompson’s death won’t be as senseless as school shootings if it catalyzes meaningful reform.

EDITOR’S NOTE:

The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views or opinions of MedLearn Media. We provide a platform for diverse perspectives, but the content and opinions expressed herein are the author’s own. MedLearn Media does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy of the information presented. Readers are encouraged to critically evaluate the content and conduct their own research. Any actions taken based on this article are at the reader’s own discretion.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

John K. Hall, MD, JD, MBA, FCLM, FRCPC

John K. Hall, MD, JD, MBA, FCLM, FRCPC is a licensed physician in several jurisdictions and is admitted to the California bar. He is also the founder of The Aegis Firm, a healthcare consulting firm providing consultative and litigation support on a wide variety of criminal and civil matters related to healthcare. He lectures frequently on black-letter health law, mediation, medical staff relations, and medical ethics, as well as patient and physician rights. Dr. Hall hopes to help explain complex problems at the intersection of medicine and law and prepare providers to manage those problems.

Related Stories

The Impact of CDI and Coding Professionals

The Impact of CDI and Coding Professionals

I often begin my day with an environmental scan. Last week, an article from Becker’s Clinical Leadership caught my eye, “Hospital mortality, infectionrates improve despite

Read More

Leave a Reply

Please log in to your account to comment on this article.

Featured Webcasts

I022426_SQUARE

Fracture Care Coding: Reduce Denials Through Accurate Coding, Sequencing, and Modifier Use

Expert presenters Kathy Pride, RHIT, CPC, CCS-P, CPMA, and Brandi Russell, RHIA, CCS, COC, CPMA, break down complex fracture care coding rules, walk through correct modifier application (-25, -57, 54, 55), and clarify sequencing for initial and subsequent encounters. Attendees will gain the practical knowledge needed to submit clean claims, ensure compliance, and stay one step ahead of payer audits in 2026.

February 24, 2026
Mastering Principal Diagnosis: Coding Precision, Medical Necessity, and Quality Impact

Mastering Principal Diagnosis: Coding Precision, Medical Necessity, and Quality Impact

Accurately determining the principal diagnosis is critical for compliant billing, appropriate reimbursement, and valid quality reporting — yet it remains one of the most subjective and error-prone areas in inpatient coding. In this expert-led session, Cheryl Ericson, RN, MS, CCDS, CDIP, demystifies the complexities of principal diagnosis assignment, bridging the gap between coding rules and clinical reality. Learn how to strengthen your organization’s coding accuracy, reduce denials, and ensure your documentation supports true medical necessity.

December 3, 2025

Proactive Denial Management: Data-Driven Strategies to Prevent Revenue Loss

Denials continue to delay reimbursement, increase administrative burden, and threaten financial stability across healthcare organizations. This essential webcast tackles the root causes—rising payer scrutiny, fragmented workflows, inconsistent documentation, and underused analytics—and offers proven, data-driven strategies to prevent and overturn denials. Attendees will gain practical tools to strengthen documentation and coding accuracy, engage clinicians effectively, and leverage predictive analytics and AI to identify risks before they impact revenue. Through real-world case examples and actionable guidance, this session empowers coding, CDI, and revenue cycle professionals to shift from reactive appeals to proactive denial prevention and revenue protection.

November 25, 2025
Sepsis: Bridging the Clinical Documentation and Coding Gap to Reduce Denials

Sepsis: Bridging the Clinical Documentation and Coding Gap to Reduce Denials

Sepsis remains one of the most frequently denied and contested diagnoses, creating costly revenue loss and compliance risks. In this webcast, Angela Comfort, DBA, MBA, RHIA, CDIP, CCS, CCS-P, provides practical, real-world strategies to align documentation with coding guidelines, reconcile Sepsis-2 and Sepsis-3 definitions, and apply compliant queries. You’ll learn how to identify and address documentation gaps, strengthen provider engagement, and defend diagnoses against payer scrutiny—equipping you to protect reimbursement, improve SOI/ROM capture, and reduce audit vulnerability in this high-risk area.

September 24, 2025

Trending News

Featured Webcasts

Top 10 Audit Targets for 2026-2027 for Hospitals & Physicians: Protect Your Revenue

Stay ahead of the 2026-2027 audit surge with “Top 10 Audit Targets for 2026-2027 for Hospitals & Physicians: Protect Your Revenue,” a high-impact webcast led by Michael Calahan, PA, MBA. This concise session gives hospitals and physicians clear insight into the most likely federal audit targets, such as E/M services, split/shared and critical care, observation and admissions, device credits, and Two-Midnight Rule changes, and shows how to tighten documentation, coding, and internal processes to reduce denials, recoupments, and penalties. Attendees walk away with practical best practices to protect revenue, strengthen compliance, and better prepare their teams for inevitable audits.

January 29, 2026

AI in Claims Auditing: Turning Compliance Risks into Defensible Systems

As AI reshapes healthcare compliance, the risk of biased outputs and opaque decision-making grows. This webcast, led by Frank Cohen, delivers a practical Four-Pillar Governance Framework—Transparency, Accountability, Fairness, and Explainability—to help you govern AI-driven claim auditing with confidence. Learn how to identify and mitigate bias, implement robust human oversight, and document defensible AI review processes that regulators and auditors will accept. Discover concrete remedies, from rotation protocols to uncertainty scoring, and actionable steps to evaluate vendors before contracts are signed. In a regulatory landscape that moves faster than ever, gain the tools to stay compliant, defend your processes, and reduce liability while maintaining operational effectiveness.

January 13, 2026
Surviving Federal Audits for Inpatient Rehab Facility Services

Surviving Federal Audits for Inpatient Rehab Facility Services

Federal auditors are zeroing in on Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility (IRF) and hospital rehab unit services, with OIG and CERT audits leading to millions in penalties—often due to documentation and administrative errors, not quality of care. Join compliance expert Michael Calahan, PA, MBA, to learn the five clinical “pillars” of IRF-PPS admissions, key documentation requirements, and real-life case lessons to help protect your revenue.

November 13, 2025

Trending News

Prepare for the 2025 CMS IPPS Final Rule with ICD10monitor’s IPPSPalooza! Click HERE to learn more

Get 15% OFF on all educational webcasts at ICD10monitor with code JULYFOURTH24 until July 4, 2024—start learning today!

CYBER WEEK IS HERE! Don’t miss your chance to get 20% off now until Dec. 1 with code CYBER25

CYBER WEEK IS HERE! Don’t miss your chance to get 20% off now until Dec. 2 with code CYBER24