The No Surprises Act and State Arbitration Pathway Compliance Officer will lead the organization’s end-to-end compliance and operations for federal surprise billing protections and state surprise billing/arbitration pathways. This role ensures the organization correctly determines whether claims fall under the federal NSA pathway or state law (often differing for fully insured vs. self-insured plans), and that required notices, documentation, and filing deadlines are met—supporting dispute strategy without creating regulatory exposure. This role is especially important for multi-state physician organizations with meaningful out-of-network exposure, where jurisdiction determination, timeline management, and complete dispute documentation materially affect both compliance risk and financial outcomes. Why This Role Matters The No Surprises Act restricts surprise billing for certain emergency and non-emergency services and limits patients to in-network cost sharing for protected services. It also creates operational requirements for: Federal IDR (Independent Dispute Resolution) Good faith estimates (GFEs) for uninsured/self-pay patients Patient-provider dispute resolution (PPDR) readiness Disclosures, notice and consent workflows (where permitted) Strict documentation and timing obligations Because some claims may be governed by state processes (especially fully insured claims), the organization needs a dedicated owner for both federal and state pathways. Scope Federal surprise billing compliance and disclosures Federal IDR operations (including open negotiation) Uninsured/self-pay GFE compliance and PPDR readiness State surprise billing laws and state arbitration/dispute pathways (multi-state)
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Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Mid Level