OT Denials of health-insurance claims are rising — and getting weirder

Discussion in 'Blazers OT Forum' started by SlyPokerDog, May 18, 2023.

  1. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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    Millions of Americans in the past few years have run into this experience: filing a health-care insurance claim that once might have been paid immediately but instead is just as quickly denied. If the experience and the insurer’s explanation often seem arbitrary and absurd, that might be because companies appear increasingly likely to employ computer algorithms or people with little relevant experience to issue rapid-fire denials of claims — sometimes bundles at a time — without even reviewing the patient’s medical chart; a job title at one company was “denial nurse.”

    It’s a handy way for insurers to keep revenue high — and just the sort of thing that provisions of the Affordable Care Act were meant to prevent. Because the law prohibited insurers from deploying a number of previously profit-protecting measures such as refusing to cover patients with preexisting conditions, the authors worried that insurers would compensate by increasing the number of denials.

    And so, the law tasked the Department of Health and Human Services with monitoring denials in both plans on the Obamacare marketplace as well as those offered by employers and insurers. It hasn’t fulfilled that assignment. Thus, denials have become yet another predictable, miserable part of the patient experience, with countless Americans unjustly being forced to pay out of pocket or, faced with that prospect, forgoing needed medical help.

    A recent study by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) of plans on the Affordable Care Act marketplace found that even when patients received care from in-network physicians — doctors and hospitals approved by these same insurers — the companies in 2021 nonetheless denied, on average, 17 percent of claims. One insurer denied 49 percent of claims in 2021; another’s turndowns hit an astonishing 80 percent in 2020. Despite the potentially dire impact that denials have on patients’ health or finances, data shows that people appeal only once in every 500 cases.

    Sometimes, the insurers’ denials defy not just medical standards of care but also plain old human logic. Here is a sampling collected for the “Bill of the Month” joint project of KFF Health News, where I work, and NPR.



    • Dean Peterson of Los Angeles said he was “shocked” when payment was denied for a heart procedure to treat an arrhythmia, which had caused him to faint with a heart rate of 300 beats per minute. After all, he had the insurer’s preapproval for the expensive ($143,206) intervention. More confusing still, the denial letter said the claim had been rejected because he had “asked for coverage for injections into nerves in your spine” (he hadn’t) that were “not medically needed.” Months later, after dozens of calls and a patient advocate’s assistance, the situation is still not resolved.
    • An insurer’s letter was sent directly to a newborn child denying coverage for his fourth day in a neonatal intensive-care unit. “You are drinking from a bottle,” the denial notification said, and “you are breathing on your own.” If only the baby could read.
    • Deirdre O’Reilly’s college-age son, suffering a life-threatening anaphylactic allergic reaction, was saved by epinephrine shots and steroids administered intravenously in a hospital emergency room. His mother, utterly relieved by that news, was less pleased to be informed by the family’s insurer that the treatment was “not medically necessary.”
    As it happens, O’Reilly is an intensive-care physician at the University of Vermont. “The worst part was not the money we owed,” she said of the $4,792 bill. “The worst part was that the denial letters made no sense — mostly pages of gobbledygook.” She has filed two appeals, so far without success.

    Some denials are, of course, well-considered, and some insurers deny only 2 percent of claims, the recent KFF study found. But the increase in denials, and the often strange rationales offered, might be explained, in part, by a ProPublica investigation of Cigna — an insurance giant with 170 million customers worldwide.

    ProPublica’s investigation, published in March, found that an automated system, called PXDX, allowed Cigna medical reviewers to sign off on 50 charts in 10 seconds presumably without even examining the patients’ records.



    Decades ago, insurers’ reviews were reserved for a tiny fraction of expensive treatments to make sure providers were not ordering with an eye on profit instead of patient needs.

    These reviews — and the denials — have now trickled down to the most mundane medical interventions and needs, including things such as asthma inhalers or the heart medicine that a patient has been on for months or years. Automation makes the reviewing cheap and easy. A 2020 study estimated that automated claims-processing saves U.S. insurers more than $11 billion annually.

    Worse still, what’s approved and what’s denied can be based on an insurer’s shifting contracts with drug and device manufacturers rather than optimal patient treatment.


    Challenging a denial can take hours of patients’ and doctors’ time — the process for larger claims is often fabulously complicated. Many people don’t have the knowledge or stamina to take on the task, unless the bill is especially large or the treatment obviously lifesaving.


    The Affordable Care Act clearly stated that HHS “shall” collect the data on denials from private health insurers and group health plans and is supposed to make that information publicly available. (Who would choose a plan that denied half of claims?) The data is also supposed to be available to state insurance commissioners, who share with HHS the duties of oversight and trying to curb abuse.

    To date, such information-gathering has been haphazard and limited to a small subset of plans, and the data isn’t audited to ensure it is complete, according to Karen Pollitz, one of the authors of the KFF study. Federal oversight and enforcement based on the data are therefore more or less nonexistent. HHS did not respond to requests for comment.

    The government has the power and duty to end the fire hose of reckless denials that are harming patients financially and medically. Thirteen years after passage of the ACA, perhaps it is time for the mandated investigation and enforcement to begin.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...Tn8xpKAag4jpG2tjSUje0slVsF7b_jWBrTL-nfJZbLzWA
     
  2. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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  3. Phatguysrule

    Phatguysrule Well-Known Member

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    I have health insurance. My daughter missed most of her junior season because my employer based health insurance refused to authorize an MRI to find out if she had torn her ACL after being tackled in a game against Canby.

    The ACL was torn, but we didn't know it and she had to rehab for a sprained MCL for 3 months first. Then once she was approved to play she got through 3 weeks of full speed practice and 1.5 games before she sprained her MCL again. Not as bad this time, because she went limp and toppled as soon as she felt it while doing a euro.

    This MCL sprain happened because her ACL had been completely severed for the prior 3 months and wasn't there to support the MCL during that hard lateral move. But there was no way to know since insurance wouldn't authorize the MRI.

    Access to necessary healthcare should be a right in this country. With no out of pocket cost or debt involved. The fact that it isn't causes us SO many other problems.

    Had insurance just approved the MRI my daughter would have had her whole junior season and not wasted thousands on rehab for an MCL she had to sprain again before they would approve an MRI.
     
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  4. Everything Beagle

    Everything Beagle Local Trans Icon

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    Every company has realized they can get away with damn near anything, because workers have no power anymore. It will only get worse.

    The cruelty is just business.

    And I wanna add: they're doing this because they can't in other countries. Because those countries have like... laws? and things?? that serve the human beings occupying those countries??? Weird. I guess you gotta put the heel of your boot down somewhere if you're having to tread carefully elsewhere. I guess it'll just be our necks forever.
     
    Last edited: May 18, 2023
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  5. tlongII

    tlongII Legendary Poster

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    I have a disc problem in my neck and my insurance won't cover an MRI because I haven't lost strength in my left arm at this point. So stupid because an MRI is the only way they can accurately diagnose the issue. I'm having a lot of pain currently and there is nothing I can do about it until it gets worse.
     
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  6. Phatguysrule

    Phatguysrule Well-Known Member

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    I'm sorry to hear that. Unfortunately it'll probably end up costing more by that point...

    But everyone gets more money if it does. So it works out well for everyone except you and the other people don't make money on this system.
     
    Last edited: May 18, 2023

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