The Department of Labor July 31  a third-party administrator owned by UnitedHealth Group in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin, alleging it improperly denied claims for emergency services and urinary drug screening since 2015. The department asks the court to require the third-party administrator (UMR Inc.) to reform its claims processing procedures for such claims, readjudicate the affected claims in compliance with the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, and enjoin it from committing future violations. 

The AHA in June 2021 sent a letter to UnitedHealthcare鈥檚 CEO responding to the insurer鈥檚 decision to allow retroactive denial of coverage for emergency-level care in facilities. 鈥淧atients are not medical experts and should not be expected to self-diagnose during what they believe is a medical emergency,鈥 the letter stated. 鈥淭hreatening patients with a financial penalty for making the wrong decision could have a chilling effect on seeking emergency care.鈥 

In addition, the AHA letter said, 鈥渢his is exactly why federal law requires insurers to adhere to the prudent layperson standard, which prohibits insurers from putting up coverage roadblocks to emergency services, such as by determining retroactively whether a service will be covered based on the patient鈥檚 final diagnosis.鈥

Related News Articles

Headline
A Minnesota state court April 15 dismissed a lawsuit filed by PhRMA challenging the state鈥檚 law protecting 340B pricing for contract pharmacy arrangements. The鈥
Headline
The Healthcare Equality Network July 3 sent a letter to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, expressing concerns about claims denials by鈥
Headline
The New Hampshire Hospital Association recently released a report highlighting the challenges New Hampshire hospitals and health systems face in dealing鈥
Headline
The Department of Justice this week issued formal guidance on how it awards credit to defendants who cooperate during a False Claims Act investigation. Under鈥