Anjalee Khemlani·Senior Reporter Thu, June 10, 2021, 1:35 PM
Source: Yahoo Finance
Unsplash, Luis Sanchez
UnitedHealthcare (UNH) delayed the start date for a new policy it announced this week, regarding the company's intention to reject claims for non-emergency visits to the emergency room.
The original start date was July 1, but the company said it would delay the rollout until the end of the pandemic.
"Based on feedback from our provider partners and discussions with medical societies, we have decided to delay the implementation of our emergency department policy until at least the end of the national public health emergency period," a spokesperson told Yahoo Finance.
The move was met with stark criticism Tuesday, from patient advocacy groups and health experts who worry the move will discourage people from seeking care when they need it. But the health industry has long worried about the excessive cost of over-reliance on the ER. "The emergency door is the most expensive entrance into the hospital, any hospital," health expert Michellene Davis told Yahoo Finance.
UnitedHealthcare said it isn't a blanket rejection policy and takes into account the reason a person comes into the ER, the intensity of diagnostic services needed, and whether the issue is a threat to the patient's health because of underlying risk factors.
"Unnecessary use of the emergency room costs nearly $32 billion annually, driving up health care costs for everyone," according to a UHN statement to Yahoo Finance. The goal is to urge individuals to seek care in less costly settings, such as urgent care or primary care offices and tele-health. But most of these options are only available during the day or evening. Later at night, emergency rooms remain the only option.
It's why advocates have pushed back on the rule, saying it places too much of a burden on patients.
Dr. Megan Ranney, an emergency room doctor at Brown Emergency Medicine, took to social media to explain.
"This policy is horrible. Patients shouldn’t be forced to decide if they’re having an 'emergency,'" Ranney said.
She and others have said that some seemingly inane issues could have urgent underlying impacts.
"I’ve taken care of people with...'pink eye' who had vision-threatening infections," she said. The American Hospital Association also pushed back Tuesday, calling for the company to reverse its decision.
"UHC may believe inappropriate use of the emergency room is a widespread problem; however, there is limited evidence to support this view," AHA said in its letter to UHC. Molly Smith, group vice president of public policy at AHA told Yahoo Finance that while the stated reason for the policy by UHC, to help reduce costs, is understandable, "we don't think United is the trusted messenger."
And the policy itself is not the right solution to the problem.
"There's never a place for this policy. There's never a place to threaten patients," Smith said. One key demographic that is unaffected by the new policy is individuals covered through Medicare or Medicaid, as the policy only applies to commercial plans. This, according to Davis, a former hospital executive and current CEO of National Medical Fellowships, is a small but bright spot.
UHC is not the first to come up with such a policy. Anthem (ANTM) rolled out a similar policy in 2018, which faced similar backlash.
Both companies have pages on their company websites to help guide members on ER versus urgent care use.
While UnitedHealth did not express which reasons for a visit it could deny, a post from 2019 offers some insight.
"According to UnitedHealth Group research, two-thirds of hospital ED visits annually by privately insured individuals in the United States — 18 million out of 27 million — are avoidable. Ten common primary care treatable conditions frequently treated at hospital EDs are bronchitis, cough, dizziness, flu, headache, low back pain, nausea, sore throat, strep throat and upper respiratory infection," according to the post. Follow Anjalee
The rising cost of health care including health insurance have alarmed several from Warren Buffet to Congress people. Health Insurance companies in recent history have been subject to hospital monopolies who dominant market areas and setting medical cost prices leaving health insurance companies no option but to pay or offer their insurance receivers no coverage in the area. Well it appears that health insurance are beginning to push back on the rise of health care costs, which are past on through premiums to patients.
How much does your total health care costs for one year from insurance premiums to medications / drugs and co-pays? How has your cost for health care risen in recent times? Is health care affordable? Are the health care treatments you receive necessary or are you subject to over billing and unneeded billing?
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