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AUSTIN, Texas, Aug. 31 /PRNewswire/ -- The Supreme Court of Texas has ruled that hospitals providing Medicare-related services can seek reimbursement in state court without first being forced to pursue costly and time-consuming reviews through "the federal administrative machinery."
"This is a huge victory for health care providers," says attorney Scott Clearman of Houston-based McClanahan & clearman, who represents five area hospital systems in their case against Hartford, Conn.-based Aetna Inc. (NYSE: AET). "It's not often that the Texas Supreme Court rules against insurance companies. More important, this decision puts a little more certainty in the health care system and that's good for everyone."
Mr. Clearman represents Christus Health Gulf Coast; Christus Health Southeast Texas, Gulf Coast Division Inc.; Memorial Hermann Hospital System; and Baptist Hospitals of Southeast Texas.
In the late 1990's, the hospitals contracted with North American Medical Management of Texas (NAMM). NAMM received payments from NYLCare, a subsidiary owned by Aetna to provide health care services under the Medicare+Choice program. Medicare+Choice was established in 1997 to provide Medicare beneficiaries with a wider range of health plan choices.
In a state court lawsuit, the hospitals alleged that NAMM grossly mismanaged its accounting and, ultimately, ceased paying the hospitals for their services. The hospitals claimed that Texas law made Aetna responsible for $13,967,759.19 in unpaid service fees once NAMM was placed into supervised conservatorship by the Texas Department of Insurance. |