20 November 2024

Because There Is No Money in That

Over at ProPublica, they ask why health insurance regulators have, "Failed to Curb Ghost Networks."

Because the insurers are powerful, and damages her and not huge in the scheme of things. (Think about health insurance rat-f%$#ery on denial of services)

To uncover the truth about a pernicious insurance industry practice, staffers with the New York state attorney general’s office decided to tell a series of lies.

So, over the course of 2022 and 2023, they dialed hundreds of mental health providers in the directories of more than a dozen insurance plans. Some staffers pretended to call on behalf of a depressed relative. Others posed as parents asking about their struggling teenager.

They wanted to know two key things about the supposedly in-network providers: Do you accept insurance? And are you accepting new patients?

The more the staffers called, the more they realized that the providers listed either no longer accepted insurance or had stopped seeing new patients. That is, if they heard back from the providers at all.

In a report published last December, the office described rampant evidence of these “ghost networks,” where health plans list providers who supposedly accept that insurance but who are not actually available to patients. The report found that 86% of the listed mental health providers who staffers had called were “unreachable, not in-network, or not accepting new patients.” Even though insurers are required to publish accurate directories, New York Attorney General Letitia James’ office didn’t find evidence that the state’s own insurance regulators had fined any insurers for their errors.

This problem is not limited to mental healthcare providers, but it is clear that insurers are loathe to provide mental health care services.

The solution is not to fine these providers, that makes it just another cost of doing business, you need to arrest and jail the people doing this.

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