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AHA Amicus Brief in Supreme Court Challenges 5th Circuit Ruling on Preventive Care Service Coverage

Amici and their member-hospitals know better than anyone that preventive healthcare services are essential for the early diagnosis and treatment of life-threatening illnesses for millions of Americans. Amici write to offer guidance, from hospitals’ perspectives, on the harmful impact that upholding the Fifth Circuit’s decision would have on the American healthcare system and all who depend on it.
Public

Amicus Brief: Guardian Flight, L.L.C.; Med-Trans Corporation, v. Health Care Service Corporation

No. 24-10561IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALSFOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT 
Member

AHA, AMA Urge Appeals Court to Invalidate NSA Dispute Resolution Process

The AHA and American Medical Association urge the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit to affirm a district court decision that invalidated a No Surprises Act final rule that favors insurers in the independent dispute resolution process and threatens serious harm to the law’s patient protection goals.
Member

Amicus Brief: AHA, AMA Brief Supports No Surprises Act Dispute Resolution Challenge

The AHA and American Medical Association friend-of-the-court brief in support of a Texas Medical Association lawsuit claiming the revised independent dispute resolution process for determining payment for out-of-network services under the No Surprises Act skews the arbitration results in commercial insurers’ favor in ways that violate the compromise Congress reached in the Act.
Member

Defendants’ Supplemental Brief Re: Vacate Surprise Medical Billing Rule

The federal government tells the court it anticipates issuing a final rule by early this summer, which is later than the May time period it had been expected.
Member

AMA/AHA Supplemental Brief Re: Vacate Surprise Medical Billing Rule

The AHA and American Medical Association urge the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to act as quickly as possible to hold unlawful and vacate all provisions they are challenging in the federal government’s interim final rule on surprise medical billing, which took effect in January.