Chiropractic association calls for crackdown
Chiropractic association calls for crackdown
On the heels of a Dateline NBC exposé on State Farm Insurance company’s alleged unfair denial of medical claims, the American Chiroprac-tic Association (ACA) in Arlington, VA, is calling on every state insurance commissioner to investigate many "out of control" medical review programs by "incompetent" claims reviewers that have placed patients at risk.
"Dateline NBC made the entire country aware of what we have always known," wrote ACA president James Mert, DC, DACBR, in a letter to every state commissioner of insurance. "Many insurers and their selected vendors who perform medical review are not accountable for their cost-cutting guidelines and, in many cases, are incompetent. Thousands of complaints are received from our members that cite these injustices, which we believe are not consistent with fair claims practices."
In his letter, Mertz expressed the ACA’s support for the National Association of Insurance Commissioners’ (NAIC) investigation into unfair claims practices and extends ACA’s assistance to state agencies to help develop local solutions. In a recent series called "The Paper Chase," Dateline NBC correspondent John Larson uncovered disturbing claims review practices by State Farm and other major insurance companies. The broadcast prompted not only an investigation into these practices by NAIC, but also concern among members of the powerful House and Senate Commerce Committees, who vowed to fully examine the problem.
According to the ACA, unfair medical review practices hit the chiropractic profession especially hard. The ACA estimates that doctors of chiropractic spend a significant amount of their overhead expenses communicating with insurers on medical review issues.
"Many of these medical review programs, which lack accountability and integrity, have been allowed to proliferate without adequate regulation," Mertz’ letter stated. "They hurt the public, and they do not have a positive impact on quality of care. We look to your state agency to help unravel this pressing public issue and welcome the opportunity to work with you and your staff and/or a coalition of interested groups to create reasonable medical review standards that don’t compromise patient quality or limit access to needed care."
The letter, which was copied to state governors, the NAIC, and the Insurance Regulatory Examining Society, included a list of more than a dozen complaints ACA commonly receives from its members regarding unfair claims practices.
These are some of the complaints received from ACA members regarding unfair claim practices:
- Clinically untrained individuals performing reviews are not trained in patient treatment protocols and are ill equipped to discuss such matters with treating providers.
- Registered nurses create software edits and establish medical review policy without the benefit of input from the specialties that are most affected by such policy.
- Medical directors often ignore input from specialty groups and implement medical review policy that is consistent with their own thinking. It does not reflect current practices of other disciplines.
- Insurers and vendors employ chiropractic consultants, but don’t necessarily use their input in decision making or in medical review policy development.
Subscribe Now for Access
You have reached your article limit for the month. We hope you found our articles both enjoyable and insightful. For information on new subscriptions, product trials, alternative billing arrangements or group and site discounts please call 800-688-2421. We look forward to having you as a long-term member of the Relias Media community.