How To Appeal When Your Health Insurance Claim, Treatment, or Procedure Is Denied
Step 1: Determine what type of insurance you have.
Before seeking to enforce your rights, you must know your rights. If you have health care coverage from a third party then the odds are you receive that coverage from a health insurance company, a managed health care plan company, a self-insured association, or the government. The most straightforward way to determine what type of policy or plan you have is to check your enrollment form. An enrollment form is a document that one signs to give notice of their desire to participate in the benefits of a plan.
Step 2: Understand your coverage.
All plans have a member contract (often called an Evidence of Coverage) that specifically describes the health care benefits covered by your health plan, or something similar. Check your documents or call your health plan and ask them where you can find a list of your benefits. Some states, like California, have laws relating to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (commonly referred to as “Obamacare”), that define minimum benefits. Obamacare in California requires coverage to include “essential health benefits.” Essential health benefits include ambulatory patient services; emergency services; hospitalization; maternity and newborn care; mental health and substance use disorder services, including behavioral health treatment; prescription drugs; rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices; laboratory services; preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management; and pediatric services, including oral and vision care.
Step 3: The benefits you may be entitled to may not be explicit in your policy.
Health insurance companies and managed care companies will often deny coverage for such benefits and merely hope that the insured will not bother to know their rights. This most commonly happens when a consumer seeks treatments for mental health and special needs (e.g., Autism Spectrum Disorders). Certain autism treatments are also generally not explicit in an insurance policy, but may be required treatments under the law (as they are in California). These are trickier to determine and you should check with a health care lawyer or a large advocacy group in your state that fights for the treatment or services you’re seeking.
Step 4: Gather all information and documents about your claim or treatment denial.
Document all communications that you have or have had with the insurance company or health plan. Collect copies of all letters that the insurance company or health plan sent to you and all letters that you sent to the insurance company or health plan. If you had any phone conversations with the insurance company or health plan, then be sure to keep a log of the time and date of the conversation, the name, title, and/or employee identification number of the person with whom you talked, and a description of everything that was said during the conversation. It is also necessary for you to collect as much medical evidence concerning your need for the treatment at issue as possible. Gather copies of your medical records and all referrals from health care professionals. It is important that you learn the complete basis for the denial and have the insurance company or health plan commit to their position and reasoning in writing.
Step 5: Internal appeals process.
Insurance companies and managed health care providers have internal appeal processes that are required by law. We highly recommend that before you begin to learn about the appeal process of your specific insurance company or health plan that you contact a lawyer who is knowledgeable and has experience with health care coverage issues.
A lawyer can advise you as to how to best structure your appeal so that you get the results you deserve. Each insurance company and health plan manager has a different internal appeal procedure. You need to determine their appeals process and if you choose to appeal you need to follow their appeals process.
If you write an appeal letter, include your name, contact information such as your address and phone number, and information about your policy including the policy number, the group number, and the claim number. You should also include as much written evidence as you have such as doctor’s letters and medical records. Remember to always keep a copy of anything that you send. It is crucial to submit as much evidence as possible from physicians and other health care providers specifying why the treatment is medically necessary and why the denial is improper. Keep in mind that many companies have time limits for their internal appeal process. When you receive a denial of your coverage claim, you should immediately look into the time requirements for the internal appeal process so that you can determine by when you will have to file an appeal. If you miss these deadlines, you may lose your opportunity to have the denial appealed at all. It depends upon your specific coverage.
Step 6: External appeals process.
It is possible that after the internal appeal process your health plan provider or insurance company might reverse their earlier denial. However, if that is not the case, then in California you often have a right to have your claim reviewed by an independent body. Such an independent review can be helpful in getting your coverage denial reversed. However, an external appeals process is not something that you should automatically pursue since it is often not a prerequisite for seeking court intervention because of a bad faith denial. In some circumstances, it can be more efficient and beneficial to skip the independent review stage and simply file a lawsuit to get the deserved coverage. For this reason, if you have completed the internal review process and your denial was not reversed, then you should again consider contacting a lawyer who focuses on bad faith health insurance denials to get advice as to whether an external review is the right path to take for relief.
If after consultation with an attorney, you decide that the best move for you would be to seek an external review, then you must determine the proper entity from which you should seek the review. In California, the proper entity is determined by the type of coverage that you have. If you are a member of a managed health care plan then you will seek a review from the Department of Managed Health Care (“DMHC”). Whereas, if you are covered by a health insurance company, then you can seek a review from the California Department of Insurance (“CDI”). Both the CDI and the DMHC have similar appeal procedures.
After you determine whether your claim is regulated by the DMHC or the CDI, then you should visit the website of the particular agency that governs your claims’ external appeal. You can also call the DMHC at (888) 466-2219. You can also reach the CDI at 800-927-HELP (4357). Both the DHMC and CDI have detailed information on how to file a complaint for an external appeal. Generally, the information that you provide to them will mirror the information and documents you provide to your insurance company or health plan provider when you seek an internal appeal.
Step 7: Seeking court intervention.
After an external appeal or if you decide to skip the external appeal, then you also have the choice of filing a lawsuit against your insurance company or managed health care company. The upside to a lawsuit is that it puts immediate pressure on your insurance company or managed health care provider. Insurance companies or managed health care providers who might have ignored you in the past will usually pay a lot more attention when a member initiates a legal action. Further, a lawsuit can result in complete coverage for the medical treatment that you seek, in addition to the possibility of additional monetary awards due to the insurance company’s or managed health care provider’s bad faith in denying your claim. Most lawyers who focus on bad faith health insurance coverage law take such cases on a contingency basis, meaning they do not charge any money to a client but instead take a percentage of any recovery. As a result, you will often not have to pay a lawyer by the hour to bring a lawsuit.
Note: If you are covered under a plan provided by your private company employer, it is likely your plan is covered under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”). ERISA is a federal law and these plans are not governed by state laws. This means that your remedies are extremely limited.
About the Law Offices of Scott Glovsky
The Law Offices of Scott Glovsky has represented injured consumers and victims of wrongful business practices for more than the past two decades. The firm focuses on health insurance bad faith, catastrophic personal injury, sexual abuse, and consumer-related litigation. We get justice for our clients and hold the wrongdoers accountable. If you have been denied treatment, we can help.