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The Wall Street Journal: Washington’s push to curb surprise medical bills runs into trouble

A Congressional plan to tackle surprise medical bills is spurring a furious lobbying campaign and disagreements among Republican lawmakers that could make it difficult to pass the legislation this month. Read More...

A Congressional plan to tackle surprise medical bills is spurring a furious lobbying campaign and disagreements among Republican lawmakers that could make it difficult to pass the legislation this month.

Measures protecting patients from high hospital bills from out-of-network doctors and other health providers has the backing of President Trump, who in May urged lawmakers to take action. Senate Health Committee Chairman Lamar Alexander (R., Tenn.) is hoping the full Senate will vote this month on a plan that would address surprise bills, after his committee approved it in late June.

But fault lines have emerged over the Senate proposal, centered on whether hospitals or doctors should take a financial hit and how to settle disputes. Legal hurdles also are cropping up.

Related: Trump wants to end to surprise medical bills — why that’s harder than it sounds

And see: 1 in 6 ER visits ends with a ‘surprise’ medical bill

The challenges come as hospitals, doctors and other industry groups fiercely defend their turf. Getting a bill to Trump now appears uncertain despite rare bipartisan agreement on the need for a legislative fix.

An expanded version of this story appears on WSJ.com.

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