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Eugene

(62,646 posts)
Mon Jul 29, 2019, 09:40 PM Jul 2019

Hurry up and wait: Docs say insurers increasingly interfere

Source: Associated Press

Hurry up and wait: Docs say insurers increasingly interfere

By TOM MURPHY
July 29, 2019

After Kim Lauerman was diagnosed with ovarian cancer, doctors wanted to give her a drug that helps prevent infections and fever during chemotherapy. Her insurer said no.

Anthem Blue Cross told Lauerman the drug wasn’t necessary. She eventually got it after an infection landed her in the hospital, but that led to another problem: She ended up missing several chemo sessions.

“The insurance has been great until I got to a point that I really needed something for survival,” Lauerman said.

Doctors say they worry about the growing influence insurers have over patient care. Some are finding that they need more approvals from insurance companies for routine things like medical scans or some prescriptions, which can postpone care for a few days or even weeks.

-snip-


Read more: https://apnews.com/e062b1fe3e4c46f0b8f837a2a7844379
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Hurry up and wait: Docs say insurers increasingly interfere (Original Post) Eugene Jul 2019 OP
True indeed neeksgeek Jul 2019 #1
My husband is a prostate cancer survivor. phylny Jul 2019 #2
Minnesota Blue Cross CEO defends tougher review of medical procedures question everything Jul 2019 #3

neeksgeek

(1,214 posts)
1. True indeed
Mon Jul 29, 2019, 09:43 PM
Jul 2019

Had a physical in May. Done this a few times! Preventive care, fully covered. Always in the past everything was covered, I really cannot remember ever paying anything.

This May, my insurance refused to pay for urinalysis snd cholesterol tests.

phylny

(8,584 posts)
2. My husband is a prostate cancer survivor.
Tue Jul 30, 2019, 07:10 AM
Jul 2019

Earlier this year, a doctor saw a shadow on his hip x-ray and wanted to rule out metastatic prostate cancer via MRI. The insurance company initially denied it. The doctor had to fight to get it covered. Fortunately, it was arthritis, but I was furious at their denial.

question everything

(48,797 posts)
3. Minnesota Blue Cross CEO defends tougher review of medical procedures
Tue Jul 30, 2019, 11:27 AM
Jul 2019

Mindy dreaded having to find out if she had lung cancer. After a dark spot showed up on an image of her lung last March, the Maple Grove mother of three steeled herself for the follow-up CT scan in late May to see if the nodule had grown. But the bad news she received at the imaging center that day came from her insurer, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota, which refused to pay for the scan because it determined it wasn’t medically necessary.

“To not know if you have a cancer is an awful feeling,” said Mindy, who is using a pseudonym because her family doesn’t yet know her health status. “And then to find out the CT is denied? Wow, OK. That insurance company just played God — that’s how I felt in that moment.”

An increasing number of Minnesotans covered by Blue Cross health plans are finding that their scans and medical procedures are being denied, even though their doctor said the care is needed and would be in the Blue Cross network. The increasing trend is intentional. Dr. Craig Samitt, the company’s CEO, told the Star Tribune that Blue Cross is taking bold action to force change in a health care system that is unsustainably expensive. The action is so bold that the state hospital association this month asked the attorney general to investigate whether Blue Cross is abandoning its legal responsibilities to patients and hospitals by imposing new limits on needed care, or the payments for that care.

(snip)

Minnesota Blue Cross, a not-for-profit, outsourced its prior-authorization reviews last August to the 1,100 doctors and nurses who work for a company called eviCore, a for-profit company based in South Carolina that is owned by one of Blue Cross’ competitors, Cigna. EviCore works in all 50 states, and has more than 25 years’ experience in the field, including working with other health plans covering Minnesotans.

(snip)

The denial letter eviCore sent to Mindy contained this explanation: “Your records show that you have a known or suspected problem with your chest. They do not show results of a recent chest X-ray that were not normal. By recent, we mean during the last 60 days. Advanced imaging, detailed picture study, is not supported without these results.” When she finally got the CT scan in July, under a different insurer, the results showed three nodules instead of one.

More..

http://www.startribune.com/minnesota-blue-cross-ceo-defends-tougher-review-of-medical-procedures/513259572/

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Before Medicare, I had an individual policy with BlueCross BlueShield (Don't know if the same) and they were great. Don't know what happened..

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