What We Do

Practice Areas

MEG Law's practice is intentionally narrow. We handle two specific dispute resolution frameworks: TDI Chapter 1467 and the No Surprises Act. We handle them exceptionally well. Specialization is our advantage.

TDI Chapter 1467 No Surprises Act Underpayment Denied Claims

Texas Insurance Code

TDI Independent Dispute Resolution — Chapter 1467

Texas Insurance Code Chapter 1467 gives out-of-network providers a powerful, state-enforced pathway to dispute inadequate reimbursement by fully-insured commercial health plans regulated by the Texas Department of Insurance.

When a payer underpays or improperly denies an out-of-network claim (without clinical justification), Chapter 1467 opens the door to arbitration before an independent arbitrator who is bound by strict standards. A well-constructed case typically recovers significantly more than the insurer's original payment.

MEG Law manages the entire IDR process on your behalf: eligibility assessment, dispute initiation, documentation preparation, legal brief development, and arbitration hearing representation.

  • Applies to fully-insured plans regulated by the Texas Department of Insurance
  • Covers emergency and non-emergency out-of-network services
  • Arbitrators must consider billed charges, usual and customary rates, and clinical complexity
  • Strict timelines and procedural requirements. Getting it right matters.
  • We handle disputes from individual claims to high-volume portfolios
Discuss a TDI Dispute

What We Handle Under Chapter 1467

Emergency surgical services: underpaid by commercial plan
Non-emergency out-of-network surgical claims denied without clinical basis
Anesthesiology services at in-network facility paid at out-of-network rates
Certified Surgical Technologist and First Assistant claims
Specialty services reimbursed far below usual and customary rates
Imaging and diagnostic services denied by TDI-regulated plans

Not sure if Chapter 1467 applies? The framework only covers fully-insured plans regulated by TDI, not self-insured ERISA plans. We'll assess your claim's coverage on the first call.

Federal Law

No Surprises Act: Federal Independent Dispute Resolution

The federal No Surprises Act established an Independent Dispute Resolution process for out-of-network claims involving self-insured ERISA plans (the large employer plans that TDI cannot regulate. For many providers, the NSA IDR process is the only avenue available for those claims.

The NSA IDR requires providers to submit offers that certified arbitrators evaluate against the Qualifying Payment Amount (QPA) and other statutory factors. The difference between a strong submission and a weak one directly determines what you recover.

MEG Law handles NSA disputes with the same focus and rigor we bring to TDI matters, building submissions that give our clients the strongest possible outcome at arbitration.

  • Applies to self-insured ERISA plans (most large employer health plans)
  • Covers non-emergency out-of-network services at in-network facilities
  • "Baseball-style" arbitration: the arbitrator selects one offer in full
  • Offer framing and documentation are critical. Submission quality wins cases.
  • Distinct rules, timelines, and strategy from TDI Chapter 1467
Discuss a NSA Dispute

What We Handle Under the NSA

Out-of-network surgical care at in-network hospitals or ASCs
Anesthesiology services where the patient had no in-network option
Emergency services, including air ambulance and ground transport
Non-emergency services where prior authorization was obtained
Claims where QPA is being used to systematically underpay providers
Portfolio-based NSA submissions for high-volume providers

NSA vs. TDI: Many providers have claims that fall under both frameworks. We identify which mechanism applies and build the right strategy for each.

Reimbursement Recovery

Insurance Underpayment Disputes

Underpayment is the most common form of insurer misconduct in the out-of-network space. A payer processes the claim, sends a payment, and the amount falls dramatically short of what the service warranted. No denial, no explanation. Just a short check.

Providers often lack the time or legal resources to challenge individual underpayments. MEG Law steps in to aggregate, evaluate, and pursue those claims at no upfront cost, using the IDR mechanisms that exist precisely for this purpose.

  • Systematic underpayment patterns across a provider's book of claims
  • Single large-value underpaid claims requiring immediate dispute
  • Payer fee schedule manipulation: payments set below market rates without justification
  • Bundling or downcoding of complex surgical procedures
Evaluate Your Underpayments

Common Underpayment Tactics We Counter

QPA manipulation: setting qualifying payment amounts artificially low
Procedure bundling: refusing to reimburse separately billable CPT codes
Assistant surgeon denial: rejecting medically necessary assistance claims
Fee schedule application: reimbursing at rates far below usual and customary
Clinical complexity downcoding: misclassifying high-complexity procedures

Claims Recovery

Denied Out-of-Network Claims

Outright denial: the insurer refuses to pay the claim at all. Often the denial is issued with a boilerplate justification: "not medically necessary," "not covered," or "out-of-network." These denials are frequently wrong, and many can be successfully challenged through IDR.

MEG Law analyzes denied claims to determine whether the denial is clinically defensible or whether the insurer is using denial as a leverage tactic. Where arbitration is available, we build the case and pursue it.

  • "Not medically necessary" denials lacking clinical support
  • Emergency claims denied for failure to obtain prior authorization
  • Claims denied as "out-of-network" where network adequacy is a factor
  • Coverage denials that contradict the terms of the applicable plan
Discuss a Denied Claim

Why Denial Doesn't Mean the End

Denial triggers IDR eligibility. The dispute begins, not ends.
Clinical review often reveals insurer's denial lacks medical basis
Arbitrators are not bound by the insurer's original determination
Emergency service denials face a high bar; insurers must justify them
Pattern denials across a portfolio create leverage in arbitration

Know Your Options

TDI Chapter 1467 vs. No Surprises Act

Understanding which framework applies is the first step. Both are powerful, but they operate differently and cover different types of payers.

TDI Chapter 1467

No Surprises Act (Federal)

Covers: Fully-insured plans regulated by TDI

Covers: Self-insured ERISA plans (large employers)

Arbitration Type: Independent arbitration under TDI rules

Arbitration Type: Baseball-style (arbitrator selects one offer)

Key Standard: Billed charges, usual & customary, complexity

Key Standard: Qualifying Payment Amount (QPA) + additional factors

Jurisdiction: Texas state law

Jurisdiction: Federal law (CMS-administered)

Don't know which applies to your claim? We'll tell you on the first call.

Contingency Fee · No Upfront Cost

Let's Evaluate Your Claim.

A consultation is free, and we work on contingency. If we take your case, you pay nothing unless we recover. We keep a portion of what we win.

Schedule a Free Consultation