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Medical Banking Project rolls out pilot effort

By Fred Bazzoli

FRANKLIN, TN – The Medical Banking Project is taking on its first test case, aiming to show how the nation’s banks can play a role in solving some of the most vexing issues in healthcare data exchanges.

The pilot project plans to show how open standards can enable providers to determine how much a patient owes for service when those patients are covered by high-deductible health plans.

Also on deck is a proposal, expected to be announced at the group’s fifth annual National Medical Banking Institute in March, to use the banking system to provide consumers with access to their personal medical information.

Because these patients are responsible for most of the cost of their care, providers carry a bigger risk in providing treatment for them, said John Casillas, founder of the Medical Banking Project. Patients typically don’t expect to pay for services at the office, and it’s often difficult for providers to get them to pay weeks or months after a visit.

The increased risk of non-payment probably will cause providers to think twice about signing up for high-deductible health plans, so facilitating the process by improving data sharing and communication is crucial to adoption.

The pilot effort is called the HSA Accumulator Use Case and will be used under the project’s national reference architecture program, known as Cooperative Open-source Medical Banking Architecture and Technology, or COMBAT. The COMBAT initiative uses existing standards and open source components to build applications.

Exante Bank, an operating unit of United Healthcare and the parent healthcare plan company, is funding the project. Exante is implementing real-time adjudication capabilities and looking for ways to expand those capabilities nationwide and to other payers.

In March, the Medical Banking Project hopes to announce its second use case, which will enable consumers to access electronic personal healthcare information as an adjunct of consumer access to banking information over the Internet via online banking portals. Casillas said an automotive industry action group within the Medical Banking Project is spearheading this initiative.