By Stacy Parker
The Virginian-Pilot
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. 鈥 The wheels are in motion to bill patients who use the city鈥檚 ambulance service. On Tuesday, the City Council approved the start of administrative preparations for a 鈥渃ompassionate鈥 Emergency Medical Services billing program.
A final say on whether to initiate a billing program will come in May when the council votes on the fiscal year 2025-26 budget.
Compassionate billing aims to limit a patient鈥檚 out-of-pocket expense or to eliminate it entirely. The parameters of the program that Virginia Beach is exploring have not been specified.
Virginia Beach鈥檚 EMS is a combined system of paid city employees and volunteer rescue squad members. The general fund and donations help support it.
Virginia Beach is the only city in Hampton Roads that doesn鈥檛 bill for ambulance service.
Costs to operate the system have nearly doubled over the last few years, and at the same time, fundraising has been declining. Billing patients鈥 health insurance could provide more than $14 million a year, according .
Private insurance plans tend to cover at least 80% of the cost for ambulance transport. Under that scenario, if the city charged $1,000 for advanced life support transport, a private insurance plan would cover $800 and a patient鈥檚 copay would be $200.
Caps limit what can be charged to Medicaid and Medicare patients. The cap for Medicare patients is $687 and the cap for Medicaid is $280, according to the report.
No patients would ever be denied services, and there would be no charge for emergency medical care if a patient is not transported by an ambulance, EMS chief Jason Stroud has said.
Over the next several months, city staff will conduct a public education campaign, draft policies related to billing and work to establish a process to partner with a third-party billing company.
It will take six to nine months to initiate EMS billing, if approved, according to the city.
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