States target health insurers' red tape 'Prior authorization' is a tool insurers say they use to rein in costs and protect patients States target health insurers' 'prior authorization' red tape
But when his doctor followed the typical prescribing pattern and increased his dose of Mounjaro - a drug with a wholesale list price of more than
Marks had Cigna insurance that he purchased on the federal health insurance marketplace, healthcare.gov. After two appeals over a month and a half, Cigna agreed to cover the higher dose. A few months later, he said, when it was time to up his dose once more, he was denied again.
By November, he decided it wasn't worth sparring with Cigna anymore, since the insurer was leaving the marketplace in
"That is beyond frustrating," Marks said. "People shouldn't have to be like, 'It's not worth the fight to get my medical treatment.'"
The process Marks encountered is called "prior authorization," or sometimes "pre-certification," a tool insurers say they use to rein in costs and protect patients from unnecessary or ineffective medical treatment. The practice prompted backlash from patients and groups representing medical professionals and hospitals that say prior authorization can interfere with treatment, cause medical provider burnout and increase administrative costs.
In January, the Biden administration announced new rules to streamline the process for patients with certain health plans, after attempts stalled in
States are considering prior authorization bills that go even further. Last year, lawmakers in 29 states and
The physicians association expects more bills this year, many with provisions spelled out in model legislation the group drafted.
In 2018, health insurers signed a consensus statement with various medical facility and provider groups that broadly laid out areas for improving the prior authorization process. The lack of progress since then has shown the need for legislative action, said
Resneck, a
In
Under her bill, a medical provider's prior authorization requests during a six-month evaluation period would be reviewed. After that period, providers whose requests were approved at least 90% of the time would be exempt from having to submit requests for the next six months. The exemptions also would apply to facilities that meet that threshold. Then, she said, they would need to continue meeting the threshold to keep the "luxury" of the exemption.
Five states passed some form of gold carding program:
A 2022 survey of 26 health insurance plans conducted by the industry trade group AHIP found that just over half of those plans used a gold carding program for medical services while about a fifth had done so for prescriptions. They gave mixed reviews: 23% said patient safety improved or stayed the same, while 20% said the practice increased costs without improving quality.
The new federal prior authorization rules finalized by the
Manual submissions accounted for 39% of prior authorization requests for prescriptions and 60% of those for medical services, according to the 2022 insurance survey.
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