Blue Cross fights back: It’s appealing NC’s pick of Aetna for health plan. What comes next? [The Charlotte Observer]
Blue Cross NC, a Durham-based insurance company that has long administered North Carolina’s State Health Plan, filed a protest Thursday appealing the state’s decision to replace it with
The protest claims North Carolina’s request for proposals, or RFP, “represented a significant departure from the State Health Plan’s previous procurement and contracting process,”
The company further accused the state of making its decision based on “limited information and arbitrary scoring.”
“Blue Cross NC is proud of our long record of serving North Carolina’s teachers, state employees, first responders, county and city employees, and their families,” said Dr.
READ MORE: What NC teachers, state employees, retirees need to know about the health insurance change
But Folwell argued the shift would save money and improve health care access for state workers.
“Partnering with
In response to Blue Cross NC’s protest, Folwell affirmed his department’s decision and restated a commitment to transparency, a frequent theme in his speeches.
“We welcome the opportunity to engage in a factual, thoughtful and transparent review of the State Health Plan’s contracting process for third party administration services going into effect two years from now,” Folwell said in a statement. “Just like
Lang questioned why the request for proposals, during the bidding process, reduced the evaluation of the company “to a list of yes or no questions” and collected “no further information or details on service levels and capabilities.”
In an email to The
“The hundreds of
What happens next
Following Blue Cross NC’s formal protest, the state can either choose to accept the company’s request for a meeting, or deny the appeal within 10 days, according to the RFP.
“If the protest meeting is granted, the Executive Administrator will attempt to schedule the meeting within 30 calendar days after receipt of the letter, or as soon as possible thereafter,” the RFP says. “Within 10 calendar days from the date of the protest meeting, the Executive Administrator will respond to Vendor in writing with the Executive Administrator’s decision.”
State Health Plan Director
Blue Cross NC also said while its first step is the appeal via the treasurer’s office, it would pursue other available remedies. Asked what those remedies were, Lang said she would need to follow up on that question but did not respond to subsequent inquiries about the question.
Provider networks
In a press release, Blue Cross NC argued that its “network of provider locations” was 38% larger than Aetna’s.
Fielder said it’s possible that both statistics are true but that Aetna’s measure is probably the most relevant one to plan members.
However, he added that it matters what types of services are included in the 2% of claims out of Aetna’s network.
“If they’re especially high-cost or high-value services that can’t be easily obtained elsewhere, then enrollees might still care quite a lot even though the number of claims is small,” he said.
For more
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