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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
HMO sues Health Plan BEND, Ore. --
A managed care company in Central Oregon has filed a suit against the state-run
Oregon Health Plan, saying it routinely underpays its physicians and hospitals.
Bend-based Central Oregon
Independent Health Services, which provides care to 25,000 Central and
Eastern Oregon residents, is seeking at least $10 million to reimburse
losses it says it has accrued since 1997.
The firm also hopes to compel
the state to turn over information it uses in setting rates it pays the
company.
The breach of contract suit
names the Office of Medical Assistance Programs, a branch of the Oregon
Department of Human Services. That agency pays the Bend managed care company
and similar organizations a fixed rate per patient per month. Company
officials claim the state is shirking its legal obligation to set rates
that are "actuarially sound."
"Based on the information
we have, there are significant differences and problems with their rate
setting methods," said Patricia Gibford, chief executive officer for Central
Oregon Independent Health Services.
On Friday, September 6, state
officials declined to discuss the case or how it might affect the long-term
viability of the Oregon Health Plan, saying they had not seen the lawsuit.
The suit comes at a bad time
for the Oregon Health Plan, which pays for health care for low-income
people. Several managed health care providers have defected from the program
in the past two years. Now it may lose $30 million as lawmakers struggle
to plug the state's $482 million budget shortfall.
Central Oregon Independent
Health Service officials said they don't want to withdraw from the Oregon
Health Plan and will continue to enroll Oregon Health Plan patients while
their lawsuit is pending.
However, at this point they're
not making any guarantees and could pull out. |
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