NewYork-Presbyterian and Aetna reach deal after patients faced losing coverage

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The NewYork-Presbyterian health system has reached a deal with insurer Aetna just days before their contract was set to expire โ€” staving off an expected loss of coverage for tens of thousands of patients.

The agreement will keep NewYork-Presbyterianโ€™s 10 hospitals, array of clinics and thousands of physicians in Aetnaโ€™s network, according to officials with the health system.

โ€œBoth NewYork-Presbyterian and Aetna are pleased to come to an agreement that puts our patients first,โ€ Angela Karafazli, a New York-Presbyterian spokesperson, said in a statement on Wednesday.

Neither NewYork-Presbyterian nor Aetna shared additional information about the new contract’s length or terms Wednesday.

The health system threatened to cut ties with Aetna in recent weeks over stalled contract negotiations and sent patients letters warning them that they could lose coverage for their health care providers. NewYork-Presbyterian said in a Feb. 26 letter that Aetna had โ€œpresented an unreasonable offerโ€ and urged patients to talk to their employers about other insurance options.

If the insurer and health system had allowed their contract to expire at the end of the month, some NewYork-Presbyterian providers would have gone out of network for Aetna patients as soon as April 1.

The dispute mirrors a similar disagreement over reimbursement rates between UnitedHealthcare and Mount Sinai, also located in New York. That feud was resolved on Tuesday, but only after disrupting coverage for thousands of New Yorkers.

Aetna customer Sarah Digby said she was so relieved by news of the NewYork-Presbyterian deal that she wanted to cry when she heard about it from Gothamist. Sheโ€™ll now be able to keep her care team within the hospital system, where she receives treatment for endometriosis.

But Digby also said she did not appreciate the emerging trend of hospitals and insurers involving patients in their contract negotiations.

โ€œPatients should not feel like they’re pawns in a bidding war…

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