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Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey Accused of Placing only Most Expensive Hospitals as OMNIA’s Tier 1 partners

Valley Hospital

July 26,2018

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ according to Beckers Hospital review ,Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey paid a consulting group $1.7 million to produce reports on how the health insurer could develop its OMNIA Health Plans, which place hospitals in two tiers based on quality and cost. Lower-ranked hospitals argue three reports from McKinsey & Co. obtained by NJ Advance Media show Horizon steered McKinsey’s research to include the state’s most expensive hospitals into Tier 1, according to NJ.com.

Valley Hospital sued Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield after it was placed on the tier 2 list .

Becker’s Hospital Review previously reported 10 findings from McKinsey’s reports on June 28. Below are another five highlights from the analysis:

1. In Horizon’s first 2014 memo to McKinsey, the health insurer outlined OMNIA’s objectives: narrow down Tier 1 and 2 hospitals and lower the health insurer’s costs. Under OMNIA, if policyholders want the lowest out-of-pocket costs compared to other Horizon plans, they must visit one of the 36 hospitals in Tier 1 that agree to accept lower reimbursements from Horizon in exchange for more patients.

2. All major New Jersey health systems Horizon later designated as Tier 1 hospitals — Hackensack Meridian Health, Robert Wood Johnson University Health in New Brunswick, St. Barnabas Medical Center in Livingston and Atlantic Health System in Morristown — were absent from McKinsey’s initial top 14 hospitals, according to NJ.com’s analysis of the reports. The documents reveal Horizon CEO Kevin Conlin told McKinsey to downplay how much a hospital’s size and cost would affect which hospitals the firm chose for OMNIA’s Tier 1 partners. Horizon argued OMNIA’s value-based model meant “past financial performance is not necessarily indicative of future cost of care,” according to the report.

3. In addition, one of the reports from May 2014 highlights how OMNIA intended to steer patients away from hospitals in New York. McKinsey analyzed 2013 data to show how much Horizon paid physicians and hospitals in New York, and how much placing New York hospitals in Tier 2 would positively affect Tier 1 hospitals. For example, McKinsey projected Hackensack would see $25 million in profits “from volume in other hospital in service area,” as well as $8 million from other competitors like New York.

4. In a lawsuit, two Tier 2 hospitals — 451-bed Valley Hospital in Ridgewood, N.J., and 284-bed CentraState Medical Center in Freehold, N.J. — claim Horizon “breached its duty to act in good faith” by placing them in OMNIA’s Tier 2, thereby costing them millions of dollars. Holy Name Medical Center in Teaneck was also a plaintiff in the hospitals’ case until June 26, when it and Horizon announced they had reached a confidential settlement.

Full report from NJ.com

https://www.nj.com/politics/index.ssf/2018/07/here_are_the_documents_horizon_did_not_want_the_pu.html

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Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey Phone Scammer Alert

Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey

October 2,2017

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Glen Rock NJ, Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey  is reporting that phone scammers are targeting those who have Blue Cross Blue Shield health insurance.

Horizon does not make phone calls to confirm your personal information.

If you’re targeted for a phishing scam, you will receive a call from someone claiming to be your health insurer. The caller will ask for personal information such as address, date of birth or social security number.

Be suspicious. Protect your information. End the phone call.

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Pitching a gas tax hike and more: Who shelled out the most to sway N.J. lawmakers

14405_trenton_new_jersey_s_state_house_capitol_in_trenton

Updated March 05, 2017
Posted March 05, 2017

Hey big spenders

Special interests spent $68.3 million last year lobbying the public, state lawmakers and Gov. Chris Christie’s administration. While total spending was down 2.5 percent from 2015, “spending to promote more funding for state transportation improvement kept lobbying expenditures relatively high,” according to the Election Law Enforcement Commission, which compiled the data.

You remember that one: the fight to replenish the broke fund that pays for road and rail improvements by hiking the gas tax for the first time since Ronald Reagan was president.

Health care was another issue that prompted lots of lobbying.

Here are the top 10 spenders:

https://www.nj.com/politics/index.ssf/2017/03/gas_tax_to_health_care_where_big_money_went_to_woo.html

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The Valley Hospital, Holy Name Medical Center win right to see report on tiered insurance plan

valley_hospital_theridgewoodblog

BY LINDY WASHBURN
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

Sixteen months before the state’s largest insurer launched new health plans that steer patients to its preferred hospitals, called Tier 1, a report from its consultants spelled out how the Omnia health plan would work and what it would do to the state’s health care business.

 

https://www.northjersey.com/news/health-news/excluded-hospitals-win-right-to-tier-report-1.1522657