Health insurers promise to improve coverage reviews that prompt delays and complaints

FILE - A Medicare Advantage PPO card rests on top of a Medicare card in Portland, Ore., June 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File)

The nation鈥檚 major health insurers are promising to scale back and improve a widely despised practice that leads to care delays and complications.

UnitedHealthcare, CVS Health's Aetna and dozens of other insurers say they plan to reduce the scope of health care claims subject to prior authorization, standardize parts of the process and expand responses done in real time.

Prior authorization means insurers require approval before they鈥檒l cover medical care, a prescription or a service like an imaging exam. Insurers say they do this to guard against care overuse and to make sure patients get the right treatment.

But doctors say the practice has grown in scope and complication, leading to frequent care The of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December prompted many people to with coverage issues like prior authorization.

Dr. Mehmet Oz called prior the practice 鈥渁 pox on the system鈥 that hikes administrative costs during his Senate in March to lead the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Insurers said Monday that they will standardize electronic prior authorization by the end of next year to help speed up the process. They will reduce the scope of claims subject to medical prior authorization, and they will honor the pre-approvals of a previous insurer for a window of time after someone switches plans.

They also plan to expand the number of real-time responses and ensure medical reviews are done for denied requests.

Researchers say prior authorization has grown more common as care costs have climbed, especially for prescription drugs, lab testing, physical therapy and imaging exams.

鈥淲e鈥檙e sort of trapped between care being unaffordable and then these non-financial barriers and administrative burdens growing worse,鈥 said Michael Anne Kyle, an assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania who studies how patients access care.

Nearly all customers of Medicare Advantage plans, the privately run version of the federal government's Medicare program, need prior authorization for some services, particularly expensive care like hospital stays, the health policy research organization KFF found in a study of 2023 claims. The study also found that insurers denied about 6% of all requests.

Dr. Ashley Sumrall of Charlotte, North Carolina, says she has seen an increase in prior authorizations required for routine exams like MRIs. An oncologist who treats brain tumors, Sumrall said these images are critical for doctors to determine whether a treatment is working and to plan next steps.

Doctors say delays from requests that are eventually approved or coverage rejections can harm patients by giving a disease time to progress untreated. They also can spike anxiety in patients who want to know whether their tumor has stopped growing and if insurance will cover the scan.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a term that we use called 鈥榮canxiety,鈥 and it鈥檚 very real,鈥 said Sumrall, a member of the Association for Clinical Oncology鈥檚 volunteer leadership.

Different forms and varied prior authorization policies also complicate the process. Sumrall noted that every insurer 鈥渉as their own way of doing business.鈥

鈥淔or years, the companies have been unwilling to compromise, so I think any step in the direction of standardization is encouraging,鈥 she said.

The insurers say their promises will apply to coverage through work or the individual market as well as Medicare Advantage plans and the state and federally funded Medicaid program.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute鈥檚 Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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