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J Emerg Med ; 63(3): 420-425, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2076364

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: As a result of the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, health plans were required to implement, or voluntarily implemented, patient cost-share waivers for COVID-19-related emergency care. The impact of the cost waivers on patients for emergency physician services has not been previously reported. OBJECTIVE: To measure the impact of COVID-19 cost-sharing waivers on patients for emergency physician services. METHODS: A multicenter retrospective review of emergency physician commercial claims was conducted to determine the impact of the patient cost share waivers on COVID-19-related emergency physician services. Seventy-seven emergency departments (EDs) representing about a quarter of all EDs in California were included in the study. Emergency physician claims during a 9-month prepandemic period in 2019 were compared with claims during a 9-month pandemic period in 2020 to determine if there were any changes in the patient cost share between the two study periods and between COVID vs. non-COVID-related care. RESULTS: The average patient cost share was $19 for COVID-19-related emergency physician professional care and $52 for visits unrelated to COVID-19. Compared with non-COVID-19 care visits, the patient cost share was 63% less for COVID-19-related care. There was a small increase (< $2) in the patient cost share for non-COVID-19 emergency professional care during the pandemic compared with the prepandemic period. CONCLUSION: Payment policies implemented by California health plans were effective at reducing the patient cost share for patients that required COVID-19-related emergency physician care.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Physicians , Humans , Pandemics , Emergency Service, Hospital , Retrospective Studies
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