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In reply to the discussion: 'Out of control': Cancer surgeon claims UnitedHealthcare questioned her mid-procedure [View all]progree
(11,499 posts)14. "Collins described crying .. while handling calls from desperate patients, as supervisors laughed." [UnitedHealthcare]
UnitedHealthcare taught us ways to deny claims: Former employee, News Nation, 12/28/24
A former UnitedHealthcare claims representative says employees were systematically trained to deny medical claims and rush distressed customers off phone lines, revealing internal practices at the nations largest health insurer amid growing scrutiny of the industry.
Natalie Collins, who worked for UnitedHealthcare for nine months, said Saturday on NewsNation Prime that staff received so many different ways to deny claims during their two to three months of training, with supervisors often standing behind representatives instructing them on denial methods.
We werent given proper instruction to actually pay the claim, and there wasnt enough monies in certain files in certain companies to pay medical claims, Collins said. We would have to just get the client off the phone as fast as we could.
Collins described crying at her desk while handling calls from desperate patients, as supervisors laughed.
Collins, now the owner of Mothers Keeper Doula, quit her position after attempting to approve payment for a widowed mother of five whose husband died of pancreatic cancer, saying supervisors had instructed her to deny the hospice claim and get the caller off our phone line.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/unitedhealthcare-taught-us-ways-to-deny-claims-former-employee/ar-AA1wDB5Q
A former UnitedHealthcare claims representative says employees were systematically trained to deny medical claims and rush distressed customers off phone lines, revealing internal practices at the nations largest health insurer amid growing scrutiny of the industry.
Natalie Collins, who worked for UnitedHealthcare for nine months, said Saturday on NewsNation Prime that staff received so many different ways to deny claims during their two to three months of training, with supervisors often standing behind representatives instructing them on denial methods.
We werent given proper instruction to actually pay the claim, and there wasnt enough monies in certain files in certain companies to pay medical claims, Collins said. We would have to just get the client off the phone as fast as we could.
Collins described crying at her desk while handling calls from desperate patients, as supervisors laughed.
Collins, now the owner of Mothers Keeper Doula, quit her position after attempting to approve payment for a widowed mother of five whose husband died of pancreatic cancer, saying supervisors had instructed her to deny the hospice claim and get the caller off our phone line.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/unitedhealthcare-taught-us-ways-to-deny-claims-former-employee/ar-AA1wDB5Q
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'Out of control': Cancer surgeon claims UnitedHealthcare questioned her mid-procedure [View all]
cbabe
Jan 9
OP
Insurance is out of control, yes; but why did the surgeon take the call mid-procedure?
unblock
Jan 9
#2
I think once the procedure has started, they should finish it and resolve any insurance matters after
unblock
Jan 9
#6
That sounds correct and medically best. Until lawyers and money people stick their noses in. Which is the stupid
cbabe
Jan 9
#8
It's amazing how some people want to put the onus on the healthcare provider. . .
UniqueUserName
Jan 9
#10
Yeah. Poor judgement. I wouldn't want her as my surgeon for anything more than a hangnail.
3Hotdogs
Jan 9
#38
I agree in principle, but there's a major power disparity in play here that can't be ignored.
ShazzieB
Jan 9
#39
So what happens if half a surgery takes place, then is put on hold for more insurance questions.
unblock
Jan 9
#35
While I don't want to criticize the surgeon, but she was not "asleep!" She was under GD ANESTHESIA!!!
hlthe2b
Jan 9
#4
I'm sure the surgeon fully understands the terms, but I'll give them a pass when talking to a reporter
unblock
Jan 9
#7
Give me a damned break. I did not remove the insurance idiot's responsibility, but the surgeon
hlthe2b
Jan 9
#12
Of course I understand it. Just saying either the surgeon or the reporter or the editor might have dumbed it down
unblock
Jan 9
#18
What the hell? I never even implied that the surgeon did NOT understand the terms. WTF?
hlthe2b
Jan 9
#11
I am talking about what the surgeon said to the insurance official, not a reporter. It is the surgeon's
hlthe2b
Jan 9
#23
I have no particular insight into that conversation except the surgeon's account as filtered through the reporting
unblock
Jan 9
#24
Yes... Thank you for taking the time to read & think about it rather than make the accusations
hlthe2b
Jan 9
#21
"Collins described crying .. while handling calls from desperate patients, as supervisors laughed." [UnitedHealthcare]
progree
Jan 9
#14