State Health Plan emails show ‘lost confidence’ in Blue Cross NC before big switch [The Charlotte Observer]
Newly released emails show that problems with Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina’s claims processing system last year prompted the State Health Plan to put the high-dollar contract out to bid — a move that could end the health insurer’s long tenure handling the work.
Last month, the health plan’s board voted to give the three-year contract to for-profit
Aetna’s proposal would cut administrative costs by
Emails obtained by The
The insurer switched to FACETS in 2016, and back then ran into processing problems that drew nearly 3,500 complaints from providers and customers outside the state health plan, and a record
Treasurer’s staff watched the problems unfold and told Blue Cross NC that it wanted the State Health Plan to be the last client using the FACETS system, the emails show. The staff hoped by then the kinks would have been worked out.
The email correspondence from last year indicates that they were not fixed.
Frustrated exchanges
In a
Other correspondence shows the system had wrongly dropped some medical-care providers and told
“I know there are a lot of people trying to solve these issues but I have lost confidence that there will be complete resolution anytime soon,” Jones wrote to Sotunde and Watson on
Three weeks later, as more issues emerged, Jones told them “the plan has lost confidence in Blue Cross NC and will be posting a TPA RFP later this year to proactively ensure that the Plan’s needs are met.”
“RFP” refers to a request for proposals, a bidding process governments use to select a contractor. TPA refers to a third party administrator – in this case a contractor that negotiates prices with hospitals and other health care providers and that processes the bills.
That move meant
Blue Cross NC has been the plan’s third party administrator for more than 40 years. Its State Health Plan contract from 2022 through 2024 was worth
One email shows Folwell’s frustration with Blue Cross NC. In a
Sotunde responded with an apology. “I assure you that our teams are urgently working to resolve the outstanding problems,” he wrote.
Business
Penalties paid for performance
Blue Cross NC paid more than
The State Health Plan issued the RFP in August. The selection process required board members to focus on the three bidders’ proposals and technical evaluations by the treasurer’s staff. In a closed-to-the-public session last December, the board unanimously selected
Jones left her job two days after the
“Blue Cross NC has been fully transparent while working through solutions, communicating regularly and openly with State Health Plan staff and board members. We hold ourselves accountable and remain committed to providing the highest level of service to more than 580,000 teachers and state employees and their family members,” Lang said.
Lang said Blue Cross NC “strongly” believed its bid to continue administering the State Health Plan was in plan members best interest and that it would continue its appeal.
Under the Dome podcast: The latest developments with the State Health Plan
In its appeal, Blue Cross NC has attacked the RFP process, saying the plan’s scoring system for proposals left the company with little opportunity to explain why it is the best option.
“The scoring system assigned no points to the strength, depth, and breadth of each bidder’s provider network,” wrote
Sawchak also wrote in the appeal that the RFP didn’t take into account the difficulties in switching to a new administrator, “such as the need to change providers, the need to adjust to different approaches to reviewing claims, and the need to request new prior authorizations for certain treatments.”
©2023 The Charlotte Observer. Visit charlotteobserver.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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