Publication
Greece
The applicable legislation establishing a national screening mechanism for foreign direct investments (FDI) and implementing Regulation (EU) 2019/452 in Greece is Law 5202/2025, which was adopted on 22 May 2025 (Greek FDI Law).
Global | Publication | August 2022
The Biden Administration issued a final rule on Friday, August 19, providing updates to the No Surprises Act (NSA) independent dispute resolution (IDR) process that providers and insurers can use to settle out-of-network payment disputes. While claiming to eliminate the express rebuttable presumption originally published in its proposed rules that favor the qualified payment amount (QPA), the rules effectively impose an implied presumption favoring the QPA over other permissible factors.
The NSA, enacted on December 27, 2020, as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021, is designed to protect patients from receiving surprise medical bills. Rules promulgated to implement the behemoth law include details regarding how providers and health plans resolve disagreements regarding the payment rate for out-of-network services. This IDR process has been the subject of significant controversy.
The IDR process was designed in statute as a "baseball-style arbitration" where the provider and insurance plan each submit a proposed payment and the arbitrator is required to select from the two proposed payment amounts. Under the interim final rules issued in September 2021, the arbitrator must begin with the presumption that the QPA is the most appropriate rate and select the proposed payment amount closest to the QPA unless certain conditions are met. Providers have been critical of using the QPA as the primary factor, arguing that it favors insurers over providers and several lawsuits were filed challenging these interim final rules.
Earlier this year, the US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas in Texas Medical Association and LifeNet vacated the portions of the interim final rule establishing the express rebuttable presumption in favor of the QPA. The final rule issued on Friday is narrow in scope and only addresses the decisions in those cases and the comments received regarding the information that must be shared about the QPA when a service is downcoded.
Changes made by the final rule include the following:
By preventing the IDR entities from giving weight to any information that is already accounted for in the QPA, the rule continues to imply a presumption in favor of the QPA as the correct measure of the payment amount.
Whether this new rule does enough to balance the factors, the arbitrators must consider or will give rise to additional litigation remains to be seen. We will continue to follow the litigation and assist providers with claims they believe have been adjudicated and underpaid.
Publication
The applicable legislation establishing a national screening mechanism for foreign direct investments (FDI) and implementing Regulation (EU) 2019/452 in Greece is Law 5202/2025, which was adopted on 22 May 2025 (Greek FDI Law).
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