In Health Care, Number Of Claims Denied Remains A Mystery

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Huffington Post Investigative Fund   |  Danielle Ivory
First Posted: 09-18-09 04:52 PM   |   Updated: 11- 4-09 12:16 PM

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Are health insurance companies generally being fair and honest when they reject claims from policy holders?

That would seem to be an important question in deciding how best to fix the U.S. health system. But it hasn't been a focus of the raging health-care debate -- possibly because the answer is not publicly available.

"This is one of the dark corners of the black box that is private health insurance," said Karen Pollitz, a professor at the Georgetown University Health Policy Institute.

Data on how often insurance claims are denied -- and for what reasons -- is collected and analyzed by the insurance companies themselves. But except in California, the companies aren't required to provide those records to any state or federal agency. "The number is knowable, but not known by regulators or policy makers or patients," Pollitz said.

The main health-care reform bill being considered in the House does seek to address the matter. It would require health insurance companies to report data on claims policies, practices and denials to a central commissioner.

The issue of claims surfaced recently in California. The state Nurses Association issued a press release saying that data it obtained from the Web site of the state's Department of Managed Health Care showed that in just the first half of 2009, California's six largest HMOs had rejected more than 31 million claims -- 21 percent of those they had received.

The way the nurses group tells it, state officials didn't even know they had the data.

Don DeMoro, a policy director for the nurses' association, said that he received a phone call from the managed care department after its press release came out.

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"They said, 'You couldn't have gotten this data from us. We don't collect it ourselves,'" DeMoro said. "'The data is there,' I told them, 'but it's hard to find.' I walked them through the steps and waited while they clicked through their own Web site. Once they saw that the data was there, they politely said, 'Thank you' and hung up."

Lynne Randolph, spokesperson for the state agency, said she does not know what DeMoro might have been told, but said, "We've always known about this data."

(To check the California data, go to the managed care agency's searchable financial reports. On the pull down menu, select 'full service,' choose a company name and 'annual.' When the list comes up, click on the company name and you will download a spreadsheet. The claims data is contained on the tab labeled 'Schedule G.')

In any case, Randolph contends that the nurses' group misrepresented the meaning of what it found. She said the total number of "claims denied" include duplicate claims and claims that were eventually appealed and accepted, in addition to actual denials. "You can't just look at the numbers in schedule G," she said. "I guess it might look that way to a layman, but that data obviously does not reflect actual denials."

Tim Labas, assistant deputy director in the Office of Health Plan Oversight at the state agency, estimated that the actual denial rate across the board in California is probably somewhere between 10 and 20 percent. "That might still seem high," he said. "But there are legitimate reasons why claims are denied."

The state officials said they consider the claims data they collect to be a kind of early warning system. If they notice large jumps in claims denials for an insurance company, they have the authority to request more specific information, said Mark Wright, an official in the health plan oversight office. The office said it could not cite an example of when it made such a request.

"We could require the insurance companies to report all of the data to us, but I think it would just be too much information for us to handle," Wright said. "We'd be overwhelmed."

The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), whose stated mission is to "assist state insurance regulators, individually and collectively, in serving the public interest" said the group did not know the state reporting requirements for insurance companies, nor does it collect data on the actual number of claims denials.

State regulators tend to focus on individual complaints from consumers. But only a fraction of consumer problems with health insurance result in formal complaints.

A national survey published by the Kaiser Family Foundation in June 2000 found that 51 percent of those surveyed had experienced some type of problem with their health insurance, but only two percent had made a formal complaint. Nearly 90 percent of those surveyed could not name the agency that regulates health insurance in their state.

In recent testimony before the House Subcommittee on Domestic Policy, Pollitz, the Georgetown professor, said that collecting claims data is important because "regulators must be able to monitor patterns of health insurance enrollment and disenrollment in order to know whether insurers are avoiding or shedding."

Robert Zirkelbach, spokesperson for the insurance industry's trade association, America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), said his organization had not taken a position on the proposed reporting requirement in the House bill.

AHIP represents, among others, UnitedHeathOne, Wellpoint, Inc., Aetna, Inc., Humana, Inc., CIGNA Healthcare, and the Health Care Service Corporation, all of whom sent executives to testify before the subcommittee on Thursday.

AHIP submitted testimony to the record as well, noting that the organization had completed an internal investigation of 700 million claims voluntarily submitted by 19 unnamed insurance companies in 2006 and found the denial rate to be only about 2.36 percent.

But Pollitz said that consumers and regulators, not insurers, need more "detailed, descriptive information about how coverage works." This data about health insurance is generally lacking at both the federal and state levels.

Last year the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform requested information from 50 state health insurance regulators. They found that most states didn't know the answers to basic questions. Only four states -- Hawaii, Kansas, Texas, and Washington -- knew how many times insurers had dropped people's coverage. Only ten states knew how many individual health insurance policies were in effect in their jurisdictions. More than one-third of state commissioners did not know which health insurance companies even offered policies in their state. The federal agency responsible for maintaining health insurance standards and oversight, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, does not gather compliance data, nor does it track state enforcement.

"It is time for the federal government to take a more active role in health insurance regulation," Pollitz said.



Are health insurance companies generally being fair and honest when they reject claims from policy holders? That would seem to be an important question in deciding how best to fix the U.S. health s...
Are health insurance companies generally being fair and honest when they reject claims from policy holders? That would seem to be an important question in deciding how best to fix the U.S. health s...
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There's no mystery if you check Google.

Everything you say is unknown is being compiled by the AMA, in precisely the details mentioned by the posting here.

Democrats like to hide the data, because the largest percentage of claims is denied by Medicare. Half again as bad as the average top seven private insurers analyzed. The AMA conducts these studies to help doctors deal with paperwork overload. See page 6 in the following link.

http://www.ama-assn.org/ama1/pub/upload/mm/368/2009-nhirc-long.pdf

I've been doing investigative reporting on healthcare for over 10 years, made it to the 2000 general election for WA State Insurance Commissioner, and just launched a totally independent, non-partisan blog.

My next post will deal with the Best-Kept Secrets of Canadian Healthcare -- fully documented -- including a Supreme Cort Ruling dealing with the Canadians who die on lengthy waiting lists, but are legally forbidden from private care. My readers will have access to the full ruling.

http://PoliticallyHomeless.net "The New Majority: Americans fed up with BOTH parties."

If anyone here needs help finding facts on any healthcare issue, visit my site and leave a comment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:19 AM on 10/14/2009
- dcboomer I'm a Fan of dcboomer 5 fans permalink

My husband just had a colonoscopy as an outpatient. At the signing in, the Center's business manager said that Blue Cross Blue Shield denied coverage because they were not our primary carrier. We have had BCBS for years - they are primary for us and colonoscopy is a covered procedure. So now we will have to fight them to cover a covered benefit...­again...th­is happens routinely with them and its supposedly great federal coverage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:39 PM on 09/27/2009
- TazoWolf I'm a Fan of TazoWolf 28 fans permalink
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I was once denied coverage because I was required by my school to have a sports physical the day before my insurance went into effect. The physical was paid for and required by my school form e to be on the cross country team. A herniated disk was identified as the source of some neck and back pain I'd been having. I ended up needing surgery for it a few months later to prevent me from becoming a quadriplegic. They refused coverage because of that physical THE DAY BEFORE MY POLICY WENT INTO EFFECT! Fortunately, I did have a second policy that overlapped coverage, and we had decided to continue that, and that covered some of it, but because I had a secondary insurance, the primary insurance refused full coverage. This was 17 years ago. Things are worse now, and I find myself being refused coverage for diagnostic procedures, labs, and primary care visits. My current insurance keeps trying to say my primary care physician (PCP) is a specialist, even though he's listed in their database as a PCP, and is listed as the PCP assigned to me! It's a constant battle.

I deal with the battle because the alternative is far worse. I have several pre-existing conditions that would make me uninsurable. I've had to work full time through medical school just to maintain employer based insurance.... and it's exhausting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:19 PM on 09/19/2009
- TazoWolf I'm a Fan of TazoWolf 28 fans permalink
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The disk herniation obviously wasn't identified in the physical, but because the pain was noted, it was chalked up as pre-existing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:21 PM on 09/19/2009
- Rhiana I'm a Fan of Rhiana 18 fans permalink

When my husband was 15 he woke up with a massive headache, and literally crawled to his parents bedroom door and knocked on it. They opened the door and found him unconscious and called for an ambulance. At the emergency room, the doctors tried to admit him and run tests, but the HMO bureaucrat denied the admission, saying it must be a hangover/drugs and to send him home and let him sleep it off.

When his parents took him back again in the morning, and finally got him admitted, they found internal bleeding in his brain from a ruptured aneurysm. He had 3 brain surgeries, lost the periferal vision in both eyes (the rupture was near his optic nerve) and now has a resultant seizure disorder.

Insurance companies make medical decisions they are not qualified to make and overrule doctor's all the time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 PM on 09/19/2009
- jack7576 I'm a Fan of jack7576 30 fans permalink
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why do folks go to jail to get health care ?

free health care in jail

OMG socialism !

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:59 PM on 09/19/2009
- Nomccain I'm a Fan of Nomccain 37 fans permalink
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You can bet the farm that the facts on denied insurance claims will never see the light of day. The health care mafia will do everything possible to insure that this is kept a deep dark secret because they don't want us to know.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 09/19/2009

Go to your high school reunion web page & review all of your classmates & friends who are deceased.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:17 PM on 09/19/2009
- UncleJimbo I'm a Fan of UncleJimbo 181 fans permalink
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Let me ask this: Who is more likely to deny a claim an Insurance company drone,trained to do so to keep company profits up Or a Government "bureaucrat" who has got no dog in the hunt?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 09/19/2009
- GregO74 I'm a Fan of GregO74 2 fans permalink

Reading these comments I figured out that what my plan in life is on the money. I have health coverage through employer my portion of premium when I started at company was 40 a month 9 yrs ago today it's 145. I have a cap of 1,000,000 another words I'm basically one extreme complication away from maxing, so I figure if I need so called coverage my best chance is to commit a crime and prison system fix it. Ironic the only place you cannot be denied HEALTH is in prison!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 PM on 09/19/2009
- NancyCinNY I'm a Fan of NancyCinNY 2 fans permalink

Had a compression fracture in T12 vertebrae 2 years ago, confirmed by a CAT scan. MD presribed 12+ weeks in a Cash Brace. Bought it from local medical supplier, but my insurance company decided it was an "orthotic" and declined to pay the $370. They perhaps were willing for me to go to the MD each week at $300+ a throw and get myself plastered into a body cast ($300x12 = $3600), but were balking at $370. Had the MD call and explain to them what the brace was for, and that it was not like a shoe orthotic. They paid half (whoopie). I used it for 14 weeks, and since donated it to a charity that does work in Africa with patients who need braces, etc. for injuries.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:58 PM on 09/19/2009

Imagine a capricious conglomerate run solely for the profit of it's greedy corporate heads. Now give it the power to determine life or death over all the citizens of the country. Give it political protection from changes by the citizens of the country and empower it to arbitrarily raise it's rates or deny it's benefits to whomever and whenever it sees fit. Give it the power to make any changes to benefit itself with little or no over site or regulation. Make sure it has enough legal loopholes to circumvent any laws, rules or regulations that may accidentally be mandated against it either now or in the future. Now, make it mandatory that everyone in the country must utilize it or face governmental fines, (as yet unspecified.) That's the insurance industry package we have being debated back and forth today on the congressional floor. I don't know about you, but I'm feeling healthier just contemplating it's inception.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 09/19/2009
- KriTiKiT I'm a Fan of KriTiKiT 39 fans permalink
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they don't count denials in the business plan... that is irresponsible business practice... when your job is to approve and deny... whats the office work load you have to staff for biased on work... that is a load of crap they know it

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:36 PM on 09/19/2009
- Libarchist I'm a Fan of Libarchist 6 fans permalink
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It is not only the denials; the insurance model for health care is to frustrate, and deny individual "free will" when getting care.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:16 PM on 09/19/2009
- somsoc I'm a Fan of somsoc 60 fans permalink
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IF the Baucus bill is approved it will be a funnel of tax payer money to the death panels of the insurance industry. The denial of claims will continue, there is nothing that can stop that despicable practice that virtually makes every dollar the health insurance industry puts to its bottom line blood money. The actions of the officers and directors of these companies are nothing short of crim!nal conspiracy to commit murder.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 09/19/2009
- Sarastro I'm a Fan of Sarastro 13 fans permalink
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The for-profit health insurance model logically leads to the abuses listed in this post. The lack of monitoring, oversight and regulation perpetuates the abuse of people who can't protect themselves for many reasons. This is clearly an abusive situation. Over 44,000 estimated deaths per year in the U.S. due to lack of or under-insurance. An untold number of dead and injured due to inability to discover the statistics on harm caused by these practices in the pursuit of profit in the health care industry.

"Given the vast amount of money that the insurance and HMO industries have pumped into lobbying expenses and campaign contributions over the past year, we might just have our answer. A new report released this week by Public Campaign Action Fund (PCAF) found that these industries spent $126,430,438 over the first half of 2009. To look at the numbers in starker terms, the industries were spending money at nearly a $700,000 a day clip to influence the political process, or nearly $5 million per week."

Elections have consequences. Campaign finance reform in retrospect should have been the highest priority - to level the playing field - to make the debate based on merit and ideas instead of who has the most money.

It is time for change.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 PM on 09/19/2009
- somsoc I'm a Fan of somsoc 60 fans permalink
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It is 50 yrs past time, it is time to dismantle the health care insurance industry and prosecute its senior management under RICO.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 PM on 09/19/2009
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somsoc, I'm the reporter on this project. If you see this, please sign up for our investigative team. http://huffpostfund.org/blog/2009/09/18/join-our-investigation-how-often-do-health-insurers-deny-claims

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 PM on 09/23/2009
- the asp I'm a Fan of the asp 10 fans permalink
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30+ years in the field, AR two teaching hospitals+ self-employed billing agency. One case that comes to mind (happened often, many doctors prior to electronic claiming) I sent 34 claims in one envelope to an HMO and 14 paid. I called the HMO to check the status of the other 20 answer was "no claim on file". It was now over the 90 day filing limit. Send them in again we will reject for time limits and then you could appeal. Asked for the CEO's name and phone number, called got a contact name to write to. I sent them a memo and supporting documents told them to process and pay. I asked them if they could give me an idea of what might have happened. Asked them if I could visit them to see how their system worked, from the mail room to their scanning machines to the processing area. They did not write back to me, or call me or fax me, but they wrote to the doctor and said they would process the claims and to not have me contact them again. I had already seen Blue Shield's operation on their invitation; they apparently didn't have anything to hide. We need Single Payer or a Strong Public Option.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 PM on 09/19/2009
- dcboomer I'm a Fan of dcboomer 5 fans permalink

RIGHT -great work and this is a great example! This happens (STILL) to us all the time as individual patients. I make copies of all our submittals and call each time. If no response, I threaten to call our Attorney General and our Insurance Commissioner. BUT we should not have to do this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 PM on 09/27/2009
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