Tuesday, May 28, 2024

When ‘Prior Authorization’ Becomes a Medical Roadblock Medicare Advantage plans say it reduces waste and inappropriate care. Critics say it often restricts coverage unnecessarily.

MULGREWCARE IN ACTION

 

When ‘Prior Authorization’ Becomes a Medical Roadblock

Medicare Advantage plans say it reduces waste and inappropriate care. Critics say it often restricts coverage unnecessarily.


May 25, 2024

Slowly but steadily, Marlene Nathanson was recovering. She had suffered a stroke in November 2022 at her home in Minneapolis and spent a week in a hospital; afterward, when she arrived at Episcopal Homes in St. Paul for rehabilitation, she couldn’t walk. Weakness in her right arm and hand left her unable to feed herself, and her speech remained somewhat garbled.

But over three weeks of physical, occupational and speech therapy, “she was making good progress,” her husband, Iric Nathanson, said. “Her therapists were very encouraging.” Ms. Nathanson, then 85, had begun to get around using a walker. Her arm was growing stronger and her speech had nearly returned to normal.

Then, on a Wednesday afternoon, one of her therapists told the Nathansons that their Medicare Advantage plan had refused a request to cover further treatment. “She has to leave our facility by Friday,” the therapist said, apologetically.

Mr. Nathanson, then 82, felt anxious and angry. He didn’t see how he could arrange for home care aides and equipment in 48 hours. Besides, he said, “it didn’t seem right that the therapists and professionals couldn’t determine the course of her care” and had to yield to an insurance company’s dictates. “But apparently it happens a lot.”

It does. Traditional Medicare rarely requires so-called prior authorization for services. But virtually all Medicare Advantage plans invoke it before agreeing to cover certain services, particularly those carrying high price tags, such as chemotherapy, hospital stays, nursing home care and home health.

“Most people come across this at some point if they stay in a Medicare Advantage plan,” said Jeannie Fuglesten Biniek, associate director of the program on Medicare policy at KFF, the nonprofit health policy research organization. After years of steep growth, more than half of Medicare beneficiaries are now enrolled in Advantage plans, which are administered by private insurance companies.

In 2021, those plans received more than 35 million prior authorization requests, according to a KFF analysis, and turned down about two million, or 6 percent, in whole or in part.

“The rationale plans use is they want to prevent unnecessary, ill-advised or wasteful care,” said David Lipschutz, associate director of the nonprofit Center for Medicare Advocacy, which frequently hears complaints about prior authorization from both patients and health care providers. But, he added, it’s also “a cost-containment measure.” Insurers can save money by restricting coverage; they’ve also learned that few beneficiaries challenge denials, even though they are entitled to and usually win when they do.

Medicare Advantage plans are capitated, meaning they receive a fixed amount of public dollars per patient each month and can keep more of those dollars if prior authorization reduces expensive services. “Plans are making financial decisions rather than medical decisions,” Mr. Lipschutz said. (Medicare Advantage has never saved money for the Medicare program

Such criticisms have circulated for years, bolstered by two reports from the Office of Inspector General in the Department of Health and Human Services. In 2018, a report found “widespread and persistent” problems related to denials of prior authorization and payments to providers. It noted that Advantage plans overturned 75 percent of those denials when patients or providers appealed.

In 2022, a second inspector general’s report revealed that 13 percent of denied prior authorization requests met Medicare coverage rules and probably would have been approved by traditional Medicare.

By that point, a KFF analysis found, the proportion of prior authorization denials overturned on appeal had reached 82 percent, raising the possibility that many “should not have been denied in the first place,” Dr. Biniek said.

Yet few denials — only about 11 percent — are appealed. Last year, a KFF study found that 35 percent of all Medicare beneficiaries didn’t know they had a legal right to appeal; 7 percent mistakenly thought they had no such right.

Moreover, the appeals process can be complex, a burden for those already struggling through health crises. “Insurers may deny more aggressively because they know people don’t appeal,” Dr. Biniek added.

Faced with denials, patients may pay out of pocket for care that should be covered; if they can’t afford to, some just give up. “People don’t get the care to which they’re entitled,” Mr. Lipschutz said.

Responding to the inspector general reports, and to a rising tide of complaints, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has established two new rules to protect consumers and streamline prior authorization.

Among other actions, it clarified that Medicare Advantage plans must cover the same “medically necessary care” as traditional Medicare. “CMS will be conducting oversight” to ensure compliance, the agency said in an email to The Times; its enforcement mechanisms include financial penalties.

Starting in 2026, another new rule will speed the process, cutting the time in which insurers must respond to prior authorization requests to seven days from 14. (For “expedited requests,” it’s 72 hours.) The rule also will require insurance plans to post prior authorization information — numbers of requests, review times, denials and appeals — on their websites. The following year, plans must adopt a new digital system so that plans and providers can more efficiently share information about prior authorization review.

Patients and advocacy groups have powerful allies in their efforts to reform prior authorization; health care providers have also complained. The American Medical Association, the American Hospital Association and other professional and trade groups have called for change; congressional representatives from both parties have introduced legislation.

“Medicare Advantage makes us jump through so many hoops,” said Dr. Sandeep Singh, chief medical officer of the Good Shepherd Rehabilitation Network in Allentown, Pa. “It’s created such stress in the health care system.” A few years ago, his organization had one “insurance verification specialist” whose job was to handle prior authorization requests and appeals; now, it employs three.

Prior authorization has delayed admissions, Dr. Singh said. It has steered patients away from specialized hospitals like Good Shepherd, with its intensive therapy schedules, to standard nursing homes or to home care, he added, where patients receive fewer hours of therapy and face higher rates of re-hospitalization. It diverts time the staff would rather spend on patient care.

On a recent weekend, Dr. Singh spent two hours coordinating and submitting an appeal for a patient with spinal cord damage and brain trauma. After 19 days at Good Shepherd, “she’s come a long way, but she can’t be home alone safely,” he said. Yet her insurer was “telling us to push her out now.” He decided instead to extend her stay while the prior authorization appeals proceed. “Unfortunately, we will have to absorb the costs” — about $1,800 a day, he said.

Will Medicare’s new rules make a difference? So far at Good Shepherd, “we continue to see the same level of resistance” from Advantage plans, Dr. Singh said.

Mr. Lipschutz, of the Center for Medicare Advocacy, said, “It’s clear the intention is there, but the jury’s still out on whether this is working.”

“It comes down to enforcement,” he said. He pointed out one lesson from researchers, however: It pays to appeal.

Usually. Earlier in 2022, Mr. Nathanson received a diagnosis of prostate cancer. His oncologist ordered a specialized M.R.I.; his Advantage plan said no. But his doctor contacted the insurer, and after some back and forth it agreed to cover the scan. Mr. Nathanson is in remission, although he is still exasperated at the two- to three-week delay in his care.

The appeal for further rehabilitation at Episcopal Homes for Ms. Nathanson did not reverse their insurer’s denial, however. She stayed for two more days, which cost the couple $1,000 out of pocket; they felt fortunate to be able to pay it.

After breaking a hip last fall, Ms. Nathanson now lives at Episcopal Homes. She, too, resents having her insurer overrule her health care professionals. “I wish I could have stayed with them longer,” she said in an email. “But I had to go home before I was ready.”



 

Saturday, May 25, 2024

NYC Council Speaker Seeks ‘Closure’ on Medicare Advantage Fight

 

https://www.work-bites.com/view-all/l0jlanbkw2eo00qweiapyzdrsofq20

 

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By Joe Maniscalco

New York City Mayor Eric Adams may believe the highest court in the state will still let him push 250,000 municipal retirees into a profit-driven Aetna Medicare Advantage health insurance plan if he asks the judges nicely, but City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams says it’s time for “closure.”

“We are reviewing the Court’s decision and understand the Administration plans to appeal this latest ruling,” a City Council spokesperson tells Work-Bites. “This has been a prolonged process in the courts and what the City needs is closure on this issue that addresses the concerns of all parties.”

The Appellate Division of the state Supreme Court on Tuesday, May 21, dealt Adams and his Medicare Advantage allies in the Municipal Labor Committee [MLC] their latest legal defeat when it upheld an earlier ruling by Supreme Court Justice Lyle Frank permanently blocking the privatization plan from happening.

“We have respectfully asked her to be involved for two years,” retired EMT and New York City Organization of Public Service Retirees President Marianne Pizzitola says. “Sadly, a City Council of another generation stood up for city retirees and codified the protections we earned over the years of our faithful service. Instead, we had to turn to the courts at great expense to enforce that social contract.”

Speaker Adams has actively worked to block City Council legislation aimed at protecting the existing health insurance benefits all New York City municipal retirees have enjoyed for the past 57 years. Unsurprisingly, talk now about “closure” and “addressing the concerns of all parties” has immediately put battle-hardened municipal retirees on red alert.

“We are not going to negotiate away this victory,” Pizzitola says. “This win has national significance because it helps counter the shift to predatory Medicare Advantage, a national scandal that’s cost taxpayers tens of billions and thousands of elderly Americans a premature death due to the denials and prior authorizations.”

Earlier this month, the heads of CVS/Aetna talked about further increasing those denials and prior authorizations—along with shrinking provider networks, jacking up premiums and reducing benefits—in response to rising health care claims and intolerable costs.

All of which, according to Medicare Advantage watchdog Wendall Potter, should concern privatization zealots like Mayor Eric Adams.

“Despite ongoing protests from thousands of city retirees, [Mayor] Adams has pressed ahead with the forced migration of retirees to Aetna’s club. He and the city’s taxpayers will find out soon that Aetna will insist on renegotiating the deal,” Potter wrote in his May 16, blog post.

Mayor Adams inked a five-year Medicare Advantage contract with Aetna last year, which New York City Comptroller Brad Lander later refused to register.

“Why would we retirees sit down to negotiate with the City at this point?” retired school teacher and Cross-Union Retirees Organizing Committee [CROC] member Sarah Shapiro says. “The courts have already ruled in our favor that the city must provide us with the benefits we have always had: Our public Medicare, plus our supplemental plan. I for one, would like to know how much [money] the city has wasted in NYC tax dollars to keep fighting the retirees in this city. It’s shameful.”

City Council Member Vicki Paladino [R-19th District] says the courts have repeatedly spoken on the Medicare Advantage issue—and as for as she’s concerned—the issue has been settled.

“Contracts must be respected, it’s as simple as that,” she says. “Workers have built their lives around these healthcare benefits, and the city’s attempt to pull the rug out from under them was not only cruel, but unlawful. The administration is best advised at this point to move past this defeat, give up on any appeals, and now focus on making good on the promises we made to our workers.”

Retirees have long maintained that there are plenty of good alternatives to privatizing retiree health care. Moving to a self-managed public insurance system is just one of them. 

“The reason why health care costs are so high, is the profit system that rules in this city and in this country,” CROC member Martha Cameron says. “We need to consider other options. The only one [the Adams administration] settled on was screwing the retirees.”

Fellow CROC member Jim Perlstein says this week’s Appellate Division ruling in favor of retirees ought to be all the “closure” Speaker Adams needs.

“The OLR/MLC plan for retiree health care coverage is unjust and illegal,” he says. “In another sense, it’s long past time for all stakeholders, retirees included, to devise a comprehensive restructuring of NYC’s administration of health care coverage, one that treats such coverage as a public good and not as a commodity purchased at the patient’s expense. And all active and retired public employees should get to review such a plan and vote it up or down.”

Work-Bites also reached out to Civil Service and Labor Committee Chair Carmen De La Rosa and is awaiting a response.

 Lenny

After a tremendous amount of resources spent in litigation, the time to bring closure to this issue was repeatedly missed by the city council. The disrespect shown to retirees on this issue is downright shameful. Retirees deserve better. History will be the political elephant in the room. History will remember who was on the right side of this issue. I certainly hope all minds will be clear when it happens. TY to MARIANNE and the committee for their unwavering support. History is taking notes.

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I wouldnt vote for her for dog catcher. Vote these clowns out

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Sooo....The mayor and his cronies continue to insist on pushing NYC Retirees into a Medicare disAdvantage Plan despite yet another loss in court.
It begs the question: Why?
Answer: $$$
Make no mistake about it. There's something in it for all of them.

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I think what needs to be looked at is how much money private insurers like Aetna are giving to Eric and Adrienne Adams in campaign contributions. It's that money, I think, that is driving both Eric and Adrienne's positions on this issue. I don't know why Adrienne Adams is suddenly calling for closure. Perhaps she's getting push back from her constituents. I agree with the other commenters, though, based on her record these past two years, I don't think Adrienne Adams can be trusted to support the retirees on this issue.

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It’s the right thing to do. Working for the city you always start lower than private companies. We accepted that as we knew we had Health coverage for life. It’s called deferred compensation. Thank you Speaker Adrienne Adams

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Why on earth would Marianne and company give up anything now? They are
winning on every level! They are ground zero on this issue for every civil servant in the country! Walden Macht and Haran forever!!!!!!!

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Joe's and Work-Bites reporting on the Medicare Advantage fight is honest reporting and superlative. Work-bites has done a real service for retirees in their quest for justice. Mayor Adams probably hopes to work for AETNA after he gets booted from City Hall! Ray Rogers

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Speaker Adams threatened CCouncil members w/cuts to their District if they supported Retirees. Carmen de la Rosa stated “I will not cross the Speaker: Protocol is blocking a hearing on Intro
1099. Can’t trust either Adams.

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Speaker Adams was downright hostile to the retiree bill in the Council last year protecting Senior Care. What game is she now playing demanding closure on the issue?

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I wouldn’t count on Speaker Adams to be on the side of retirees!

Thursday, May 23, 2024

Bloomberg’s Man in Albany Is Young but Seasoned (ScuzBall)

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/07/nyregion/07lasher.html

Bloomberg’s Man in Albany Is Young but Seasoned



ALBANY — Just when Micah C. Lasher thought it was safe to finally sleep one recent morning, three words appeared in his in-box: “It’s a sham.”

Mr. Lasher had stayed up all night helping write a bill to increase the number of charter schools in New York, a cornerstone of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s education agenda. But amid the frenzy, a highly contentious provision had slipped by him: the State University of New York would lose its power to approve charter schools.

Charter advocates, including the one who had complained via e-mail, were seething. Mr. Lasher raced to the State Capitol, and in a feverish two hours of speed-dialing, helped to broker an agreement among lawmakers, the governor and the mayor to restore the university’s role.

An hour later, the Assembly passed the bill.

“The adrenaline was pumping,” Mr. Lasher said. “This needed to be nipped in the bud immediately.”

As Mr. Bloomberg’s chief negotiator, Mr. Lasher, 28, is the wrinkle-free face of City Hall, balancing the roles of bulldog, policy wonk and peacemaker for a mayor who is not shy about comparing lawmakers to lunatics.

“He can go to war with you on Monday and break bread with you on Tuesday,” Austin Shafran, a spokesman for the Senate Democrats, said of Mr. Lasher.

In an office near the State Capitol, Mr. Lasher and eight staff members scrutinize every significant piece of paper floating through the Legislature.

They assemble color-coded memos — yellow to support, pink to oppose — on topics like playground equipment and workplace harassment.

Then there is the politicking. On a recent day, just when Mr. Lasher thought that a long-shot effort to eliminate seniority protection for teachers was slowly picking up support, his BlackBerry hummed with news: two lawmakers were having second thoughts.

“Are you kidding me?” he repeated in disbelief, adding an expletive the second time, even though the bill’s chances of passing were slim.

While Mr. Lasher is praised as an honest dealmaker with an encyclopedic knowledge of policy, some lawmakers, particularly those critical of Mr. Bloomberg, say his intensity can be stifling.

“He can be a real nag,” said Kevin Sheekey, who, when he served as deputy mayor, had hired Mr. Lasher. “He’s constantly pushing. That’s very helpful in the job.”

Mr. Lasher, still plump-cheeked and bright-eyed, has yet to get a driver’s license. Despite his age, however, he has built an impressive résumé. He was a secret weapon to Manhattan politicians as a teenager, and in college he created a powerhouse consulting firm.

As a child growing up in the Upper West Side, he made a name for himself as a magician. He performed tricks like the Ambitious Coin, in which a half-dollar vanishes, on NBC’s “Today” show. And by age 14, he had published a 224-page book of tricks.

The youngest member of a neighborhood club of Democrats, he was responsible for cleaning out the clubhouse. Elected officials, taken aback by his zeal and shrewd mind, were soon approaching him for advice.

“He demonstrated to me more political acumen than people who spent a lifetime in this business,” said Scott M. Stringer, the Manhattan borough president and a former assemblyman, who relied on Mr. Lasher as an informal adviser when he was 17.

The prodigy loved winning, and he became so emotionally attached to his candidates that after one of them, Deborah Glick, lost a race for Manhattan borough president in 1997, he retreated to a corner of a West Village restaurant and cried.

He developed his political muscles at Stuyvesant High School, where he warred with school administrators as editor of the student paper, The Spectator.

A long-simmering conflict escalated when he published an April Fool’s edition that mocked teachers and criticized seniority rules. The school promptly shut down the paper.

What followed was a classic Lasher crusade: an all-consuming campaign to restore free speech. Mr. Lasher and his allies flooded the school with fliers and petitions, forcing the administration to eventually give in.

Amid Stuyvesant’s overachievers, Mr. Lasher was no star student. He enrolled at New York University, where in the wee hours of the morning he built a political consulting firm.

The result was SKDKnickerbocker, now one of the city’s most prominent firms, which created fliers for Barack Obama’s presidential campaign and counts among its clients 1199/S.E.I.U. United Healthcare Workers East.

At Knickerbocker, he helped manage 76 campaigns — roughly three-quarters of them successful — and practiced a distinct brand of politics: cunning, idealistic and fiercely competitive. But his ardor has sometimes gotten him into trouble.

In 2001, when he was 19, Mr. Lasher helped design a now-infamous handout leaflet that contributed to the downfall of Mark Green, who was seeking the Democratic nomination for mayor. The handout included a controversial New York Post cartoon that graphically depicted Mr. Green’s rival, Fernando Ferrer, kissing up to the Rev. Al Sharpton. Mr. Green won the nomination, but with the party not united behind him, he narrowly lost the election to Mr. Bloomberg.

In an interview, Mr. Lasher described the episode as “something that I deeply regret being a part of,” emphasizing his inexperience at the time.

Mr. Lasher likes to say he has picked candidates he believed in, and aside from Mr. Bloomberg, they were all Democrats.

He is a devout liberal who winced at the mayor’s effort to change term limits to allow himself to run for a third term, friends say.

 

 

But last year, when Mr. Sheekey invited him to join the mayor’s Department of Education and help make it more politically astute, Mr. Lasher accepted.

Last summer, he coordinated the successful effort to have the Legislature renew mayoral authority over the city’s public schools.

Mr. Lasher enjoyed working at the Department of Education so much that he three times turned down an offer to become director of state legislative affairs.

“He was really pushed into the job,” said Mr. Sheekey, who is an executive at Bloomberg L.P. “This is an office that is more important than any single city commissioner.”

In Albany, Mr. Lasher has become a master multitasker. His recent duties have included finding ways to entice television crews to film in New York and resolving a dispute between Apple and legislators over how it sells its iPad.

 

Mr. Lasher has worked hard to counterbalance his boss’s sharp tongue. When he learned in April that the mayor was planning to denounce a proposal to cut property taxes as “craziness,” Mr. Lasher was instantly on the phone with Senate Democrats, who had championed the idea, taking the heat.

“The mayor can be a little harsh,” said Assemblyman David I. Weprin, a Democrat who represents eastern Queens. “You really want someone in the position who can smooth things over.”

Mr. Lasher’s quick rise has fed rumors that he may be gearing up for a political race of his own. He had hoped to run for the City Council in 2009, but he abandoned his plans after term limits were extended.

Now, Mr. Lasher says he has made no definite decisions about his future, though he has not ruled out vying for a Council seat in 2013.

“Do I want to succeed and do interesting things and continue to take on more responsibility? Absolutely,” he said. “Do I have some grand plan for what that’s going to look like? Absolutely not.”

For now, Albany beckons. The budget is two months overdue, summer is approaching and the mayor is fuming. Whether a young political wizard can emerge as an effective ambassador for a city of eight million remains to be seen.

“The chick just hatched,” State Senator Bill Perkins of Harlem said. “Let’s see what happens when it becomes a real rooster.”

A correction was made on 
June 9, 2010

An article on Monday about Micah C. Lasher, the chief negotiator in Albany for Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, referred imprecisely to the controversial use of a cartoon by the mayoral campaign of Mark Green in 2001. While the cartoon, depicting Fernando Ferrer and Al Sharpton, was reprinted in a handout leaflet that Mr. Lasher helped design, it was not part of an advertisement for television or for a print publication.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, May 17, 2024

As a Nightmare Brews on Wall Street for CVS, Executives Scramble to Quell Investors

 

As a Nightmare Brews on Wall Street for CVS, Executives Scramble to Quell Investors