Oct 14 (Reuters) - Insurer Blue Cross Blue Shield has agreed to pay $2.8 billion to resolve antitrust class action claims by hospital systems, physicians and other health providers alleging they ...
In October 2024, Blue Cross Blue Shield (“BCBS”) agreed to a $2. ... is reported to be the largest settlement in a health care antitrust case to date. This landmark case has drawn significant ...
Insurer Blue Cross Blue Shield has agreed to pay $2.8 billion to resolve antitrust class action claims by hospital systems, physicians and other health providers alleging they were underpaid for ...
Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS) has agreed to pay $2.8 billion to settle an antitrust class action lawsuit brought against it by hospital systems, physicians, and health providers. The plaintiffs ...
Blue Cross Blue Shield plans have agreed to a $2.8 billion settlement to resolve legal allegations from a slew of providers who claim the insurers colluded to prevent competition and lower ...
a huge class action against Blue Cross and Blue Shield has ended with a tentative agreement that is being called the largest healthcare antitrust case of its kind. Blue Cross agreed to pay roughly ...
On October 14, 2024, a class of thousands of hospitals, physician groups and other healthcare providers filed a proposed settlement in a twelve-year antitrust lawsuit against the Blue Cross Blue ...
The proposed class action settlement is the largest antitrust payout to ever be awarded ... At the center of the case is the Blue plans’ use of “exclusive service areas” and its ...
Health care providers accused the company of using exclusive service areas and fixing prices it paid doctors to allocate markets.
Blue Cross agreed in 2020 to pay $2.7 billion to resolve related antitrust claims from commercial and individual subscribers. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld that deal in June.