Insurers Often Improperly Reimburse Physicians, Adding $200B Annually To U.S. Health Care Costs, AMA Report FindsJun 19,2008 00:00 by Medical-News-Todaynsurers' failure to properly process and reimburse physicians costs the U.S. $200 billion annually, according to a report released on Monday by the American Medical Association, the Los Angeles Times reports. AMA released the report at its annual meeting in Chicago to coincide with the launch of its "Cure for Claims" initiative to reduce inefficiencies in payment claims (Girion, Los Angeles Times, 6/17). National Healthcare Exchange Services, a California-based claims processing firm, developed the report based on several criteria, including frequency of efficient payments, time taken to reimburse physicians and compliance to contracted rates (Johnson, AP/Hartford Courant, 6/16). The company examined about three million medical claims that were submitted over a six-month period beginning in October 2007 (Los Angeles Times, 6/17). The report examined claims billed to Medicare and seven insurers: Aetna, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, Coventry Health Care, Health Net, Humana and United Healthcare (Young, The Hill, 6/16). According to the report, Medicare paid contracted fees 98% of the time, compared with 71% of the time for Aetna and 62% of the time for United Healthcare (Los Angeles Times, 6/17). Coventry paid in compliance to its contracts 87% of the time. Coventry also made its first payments within four days -- the shortest time of the eight health plans -- compared with the industry standard of 10 to 14 days (Von Bergen, Philadelphia Inquirer, 6/17). In addition, Coventry made requests for further information or asked physicians to resubmit their claims within five days, a contributing factor to faster payments. Humana took 22 days, followed by Cigna at 20 days and Health Net at 17 days (Los Angeles Times, 6/17). Medicare was the most likely to deny any part of a claim at a 6.9% rate, followed by Aetna at 6.8%, according to the report. Other insurers' denial rates ranged from 2.7% to 4.6%, the report found (The Hill, 6/17). Comments --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |