CollectionPro Secures $207,575 Federal IDR Victory for Hospital Provider After Payer Offered Just $19,108
June 24th, 2026 7:00 AM
By: Newsworthy Staff
CollectionPro won a federal arbitration under the No Surprises Act, securing $207,575 for a hospital provider after the payer offered only $19,108, highlighting the importance of expert IDR strategy.

CollectionPro, a leading out-of-network reimbursement management firm, announced a significant federal arbitration victory after securing a $207,575 reimbursement award for a multi-specialty hospital provider. The ruling came after the payer submitted an offer of only $19,108.20, creating a reimbursement gap of more than $188,000 on a single hospital facility fee dispute.
The arbitration was administered under the Federal Independent Dispute Resolution process established by the No Surprises Act. Following a comprehensive review of the dispute, National Medical Reviews, Inc. selected the provider's reimbursement position in full, determining that the hospital's offer most accurately reflected the value of the services rendered.
The dispute involved an underpaid out-of-network hospital facility fee claim associated with service code 480. According to the arbitration record, the payer's reimbursement failed to reflect the complexity of care, patient acuity, teaching status, case mix, and overall scope of services delivered by the provider.
CollectionPro developed and executed the provider's arbitration strategy from initiation through final determination. The firm's IDR specialists constructed an evidence-based submission designed specifically around the factors recognized under the No Surprises Act. Rather than relying solely on billed charges, the submission focused on clinical and operational realities, highlighting the Qualifying Payment Amount (QPA) analysis, patient acuity and treatment complexity, teaching hospital considerations, scope of services, case mix, provider qualifications, and supporting documentation demonstrating fair market reimbursement value.
Throughout the dispute process, CollectionPro managed every phase of the arbitration lifecycle, including filing compliance, documentation review, payer correspondence, deadline tracking, evidence submission, and communication with the Independent Dispute Resolution Entity (IDRE).
According to CollectionPro, the firm's methodology measures performance across multiple operational benchmarks, including arbitration success rates, reimbursement recovery ratios, filing accuracy, deadline adherence, rebuttal response times, and payer follow-up cycles. Each metric directly influences reimbursement outcomes and provider cash flow.
"Many healthcare providers assume arbitration is simply about submitting numbers and waiting for a decision. In reality, successful IDR outcomes require strategy, evidence, timing, and constant follow-through," said David Nissanoff, spokesperson for CollectionPro. "Payers routinely present reimbursement positions that fail to reflect the true value of care delivered. Our responsibility is to ensure arbitrators see the complete picture and have the necessary evidence to make an informed decision."
CollectionPro currently boasts over 10,000 IDR case experience, a 92% arbitration success rate, in-house New York state licensed NSA specialists, more than a million recovered for healthcare providers, coverage across 40+ medical specialties, federal and state level IDR expertise, as low as 10% contingency-based success fees, and zero upfront arbitration costs for providers.
"Healthcare providers should not have to accept underpayments simply because the reimbursement process is complex," added Nissanoff. "This ruling demonstrates what is possible when providers combine strong clinical evidence with disciplined arbitration execution."
Source Statement
This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by 24-7 Press Release. You can read the source press release here,
