Staying current on medical billing, insurance policy, provider updates, and healthcare technology — the stories that matter to patients, billers, and administrators.
More than 20 million subsidized ACA enrollees are facing average premium increases of 114% in 2026 after enhanced federal subsidies expired. Projections from the Urban Institute and Commonwealth Fund estimate that nearly 4.8 million Americans will drop coverage entirely this year — unable to absorb the sudden cost spike. The steepest hits are landing on middle-income households that earned too much to qualify for Medicaid but too little to easily absorb the difference.
A new Blue Cross Blue Shield Association analysis found that nearly half of U.S. hospitals now use AI in billing and coding — and the results are raising red flags. At hospitals using AI coding tools, diagnoses like postpartum anemia spiked sharply without matching increases in actual treatments, adding $22 million to maternity costs in a single year. Across all settings, AI-linked overbilling is estimated at $663 million in inpatient care and over $1.67 billion in outpatient — costs that ultimately flow through to insurance premiums.
At HIMSS 2026 in Las Vegas, healthcare leaders warned that AI tools are evolving so rapidly that federal regulators can't keep pace. Oversight remains fragmented across agencies, and the Trump administration has signaled it will limit rules that could slow AI adoption. States are beginning to fill the vacuum with their own legislation — but the result is a growing patchwork of conflicting requirements that creates real compliance risk for providers and health systems deploying these tools.
After hovering at 13–15% in 2025, prior authorization denial rates are expected to reach 15–17% in 2026, driven by expanding PA requirements in imaging, specialty medications, and outpatient procedures — particularly in commercial and Medicare Advantage plans. The administrative burden is mounting for physician practices already stretched thin, with denials triggering costly appeals processes and delays in patient care that can stretch for weeks.
Two of the world's largest technology companies made significant healthcare moves this week. Amazon launched Health AI, offering free 24/7 virtual care access to Prime members, while simultaneously expanding Amazon Pharmacy's access to Eli Lilly's weight-loss treatment Zepbound. Microsoft countered with Copilot Health, a secure hub that consolidates health records, wearable device data, and medical history in one place. Together, the announcements mark the most aggressive Big Tech push into U.S. healthcare in years.
For the first time in its 60-year history, Medicare negotiated drug prices took effect January 1, 2026, cutting costs on 10 widely prescribed medications. A 30-day supply of the diabetes drug Januvia dropped 79% — from $527 to $113 — and CMS projects $1.5 billion in total patient savings this year alone. The reductions apply at the pharmacy counter for Part D enrollees and affect claim adjudication under covered plans. Billing teams should confirm that their systems reflect the new negotiated pricing for affected drugs.
The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2026, signed February 3, extended Medicare telehealth flexibilities through December 31, 2027, ending years of annual uncertainty for practices built around remote care. Audio-only visits, home-based originating sites, and expanded eligibility for OTs, PTs, and speech-language pathologists are all preserved. The Hospital at Home waiver was extended through 2030, and Medicaid DSH payment cuts were delayed to 2028. For billing teams, the telehealth coding and reimbursement rules established during COVID remain in effect through at least the end of next year.
HHS and the OIG have shifted from issuing guidance to active enforcement of the 21st Century Cures Act's information blocking rules, with penalties up to $1 million per violation. Covered entities include health IT developers, certified EHR vendors, health information networks, and Medicare-participating providers — meaning the risk spans the entire care continuum. Over 1,600 complaints had been filed with the federal portal through early 2026, and the first formal enforcement actions are expected imminently. Healthcare organizations that restrict patient access to electronic health records — even unintentionally — now face significant legal and financial exposure.
More than 50 major insurers — including UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Cigna, and BCBS plans — activated prior authorization reform commitments on January 1, 2026, promising narrower PA requirements and faster electronic approvals. But physician sentiment has barely shifted: 94% still say PA causes major care delays, and drug prior authorization alone costs the healthcare system $93.3 billion annually. The more ambitious pledge — real-time electronic PA approvals 80% of the time — isn't due until 2027. Billing teams should take advantage of the new 90-day authorization transition guarantee when patients switch plans mid-treatment.
CMS won't issue binding implementation guidance until June 2026, leaving states less than seven months to build Medicaid work-requirement verification systems before the January 1, 2027 deadline. A RAND analysis found 20 states will see federal Medicaid support drop by at least 5% — part of nearly $1 trillion in Medicaid cuts over the next decade. Arkansas's earlier attempt at work requirements stripped coverage from 18,000 people before courts intervened. Providers and billing teams in high-Medicaid states should anticipate enrollment swings and payer mix shifts beginning as early as mid-2026.