"Not Medically Necessary": Inside the Company Helping America's Biggest Health Insurers Deny Coverage for Care
Every day, patients across America crack open envelopes with bad news. Yet another health insurer has decided not to pay for a treatment that their doctor has recommended. Sometimes its a no for an MRI for a high school wrestler with a strained back. Sometimes for a cancer procedure that will help a grandmother with a throat tumor. Sometimes for a heart scan for a truck driver feeling short of breath.
But the insurance companies dont always make these decisions. Instead, they often outsource medical reviews to a largely hidden industry that makes money by turning down doctors requests for payments, known as prior authorizations. Call it the denials for dollars business.
The biggest player is a company called EviCore by Evernorth, which is hired by major American insurance companies and provides coverage to 100 million consumers about 1 in 3 insured people. It is owned by the insurance giant Cigna.
A ProPublica and Capitol Forum investigation found that EviCore uses an algorithm backed by artificial intelligence, which some insiders call the dial, that it can adjust to lead to higher denials. Some contracts ensure the company makes more money the more it cuts health spending. And it issues medical guidelines that doctors have said delay and deny care for patients.
EviCore and companies like it approve prior authorizations based on the decision that is more profitable for them, said Barbara McAneny, a former president of the American Medical Association and a practicing oncologist. They love to deny things.
EviCore says it scrutinizes requests to make sure that procedures recommended by doctors are safe, necessary and cost-effective. We are improving the quality of health care, the safety of health care and, by very happy coincidence, were also decreasing a significant amount of unnecessary cost, an EviCore medical officer explains in a video produced by the company.
But EviCores cost-cutting is far from coincidental, according to the investigation.
EviCore markets itself to insurance companies by promising a 3-to-1 return on investment that is, for every $1 spent on EviCore, the insurer would pay out $3 less on medical care and other costs. EviCore salespeople have boasted of a 15% increase in denials, according to the investigation, which is based on internal documents, corporate data and dozens of interviews with former employees, doctors, industry experts, health care regulators and insurance executives. Almost everybody interviewed spoke on condition of anonymity because they continue to work in the industry.
https://www.propublica.org/article/evicore-health-insurance-denials-cigna-unitedhealthcare-aetna-prior-authorizations
This company should be called EvilCore!
area51
(12,140 posts)but our congress is too corrupt.
lostnfound
(16,633 posts)Im guesssing that almost one-third of the country and one third of the time wasted by doctors and one third of the peop,e dying from denied medical treatments.
Only Propublica covers this. Why isnt there a weekly program diving into this, so the public can learn the names of who is cheating them, killing them, and making money from their early demise?
appalachiablue
(42,903 posts)Kid Berwyn
(17,970 posts)The wealthiest times in human history, in the wealthiest nation on the planet, and people become go from prosperous to destitute in a flash undergoing medical treatment.
Something isn't right.
FakeNoose
(35,657 posts)Thanks
dalton99a
(84,248 posts)justaprogressive
(2,447 posts)EVILCARE