Health Insurers Have Been Breaking State Laws for Years
by Maya Miller and Robin Fields
ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.
Series: Uncovered:How the Insurance Industry Denies Coverage to Patients
Health insurers reject millions of claims for treatment every year in America. Corporate insiders, recordings and internal emails expose the system and its harm.
In North Carolina, lawmakers outraged that breast cancer patients were being denied reconstructive surgeries passed a measure forcing health insurers to pay for them. In Arizona, legislators intervened to protect patients with diabetes, requiring health plans to cover their supplies. Elected officials in more than a dozen states, from Oklahoma to California, wrote laws demanding that insurance companies pay for emergency services.
Over the last four decades, states have enacted hundreds of laws dictating precisely what insurers must cover so that consumers arenât driven into debt or forced to go without medicines or procedures. But health plans have violated these mandates at least dozens of times in the last five years, ProPublica found.
In the most egregious cases, patients have been denied coverage for lifesaving care. On Wednesday, a ProPublica investigation traced how a Michigan company would not pay for an FDA-approved cancer medication for a patient, Forrest VanPatten, even though a state law requires insurers to cover cancer drugs. That expensive treatment offered VanPatten his only chance for survival. The father of two died at the age 50, still battling the insurer for access to the therapy. Regulators never intervened.
These laws donât apply to every type of health plan, but they are supposed to provide protections for tens of millions of people. AHIP, a trade group that used to be known as Americaâs Health Insurance Plans, said new mandates are costly for consumers and states, âtie insurersâ hands and limit plan innovationâ by requiring specific benefits. Nevertheless, its members take steps to make sure they are following these mandates, the trade group said.
State insurance departments are responsible for enforcing these laws, but many are ill-equipped to do so, researchers, consumer advocates and even some regulators say. These agencies oversee all types of insurance, including plans covering cars, homes and peopleâs health. Yet they employed less people last year than they did a decade ago. Their first priority is making sure plans remain solvent; protecting consumers from unlawful denials often takes a backseat.
âThey just honestly donât have the resources to do the type of auditing that we would need,â said Sara McMenamin, an associate professor of public health at the University of California, San Diego, who has been studying the implementation of state mandates.
Agencies often donât investigate health insurance denials unless policyholders or their families complain. But denials can arrive at the worst moments of peopleâs lives, when they have little energy to wrangle with bureaucracy. People with plans purchased on HealthCare.gov appealed less than 1% of the time, one study found.
ProPublica surveyed every stateâs insurance agency and identified just 45 enforcement actions since 2018 involving denials that have violated coverage mandates. Regulators sometimes treat consumer complaints as one-offs, forcing an insurer to pay for that individualâs treatment without addressing whether a broader group has faced similar wrongful denials.
When regulators have decided to dig deeper, theyâve found that a single complaint is emblematic of a systemic issue impacting thousands of people.
In 2017, a woman complained to Maineâs insurance regulator, saying her carrier, Aetna, broke state law by incorrectly processing claims and overcharging her for services related to the birth of her child. After being contacted by the state, Aetna acknowledged the mistake and issued a refund.
That winter, the woman gave birth to a second child, and Aetna did it again. She filed another complaint. This time, when the state made Aetna pay up, it also demanded broader data on childbirth claims. Regulators discovered that the insurer had miscalculated claims related to more than 1,000 births over a four-year period. Aetna issued refunds totaling $1.6 million and agreed to pay a $150,000 fine if it failed to follow conditions listed in a consent agreement.
It was a rare victory. The potential fine, though, constituted less than .002% of the $6.63 billion in profit recorded by Aetnaâs parent company, CVS Health, that year.
Aetna spokesperson Alex Kepnes said the company resolved the matter in 2019 to the stateâs satisfaction. Kepnes declined to answer why the insurer failed to fix the issue after the first complaint.
Patients often donât know what care theyâre entitled to under state mandates. And one survey found that 86% of people with health insurance donât know which government agency to call for help. Knowing how to navigate the system can make all the difference to patients socked with giant medical bills.
In December 2022, Samantha Slabyk felt a sudden sharp pain in her lower right abdomen. The San Marcos, Texas, resident took herself to an outpatient emergency clinic, but after a CT scan revealed she had appendicitis, doctors sent her in an ambulance to a nearby hospital. âEveryone indicated that this was an emergency situation that needed to be dealt with promptly,â Slabyk said.
Texas has long had a law requiring insurers to cover medical treatment needed by patients in emergencies. Yet that month, her insurer, Ambetter, wrote in a letter that it would not pay the $93,000 bill because the appendectomy took place at an out-of-network facility.
Slabyk was studying to be a physicianâs assistant and had been an EMT. Her fianceâs brother-in-law worked in medical billing and gave her advice on how to push back, as did her mom â whose cancer diagnosis meant she often interacted with health insurers. These connections and experiences gave Slabyk an unusual grasp of her rights and how the system works. Still, every time she reached someone at Ambetter, she felt like she was being stonewalled. Slabyk felt lost.
By June, she was so fed up she decided to submit a complaint to the Texas Department of Insurance. Five days later, she received a call from an Ambetter employee apologizing and saying they would process the procedure as an emergency and pay up.
Centene, Ambetterâs parent company, did not respond to emailed questions or a phone call seeking comment. (The state informed Slabyk it closed the complaint.)
âI was around a lot of people who were knowledgeable and giving me very good advice,â Slabyk said. âAnd so if youâre just like, on your own, not in the health care system whatsoever, I mean, I just, I can totally see giving up.â
California had to pass not one but two laws to compel insurers to pay for infertility treatments. And one lawmaker said insurers are still saying no often enough that heâs considering introducing a third.
After legislators began requiring such coverage in 1990, some health plans took a narrow view. They refused to pay to preserve eggs, sperm or reproductive tissue for patients facing treatments for diseases like cancer that could impair their fertility. Some patients were delaying chemotherapy to try to get pregnant beforehand or going into debt to pay for treatments out-of-pocket. Regulators forced insurers to pay in some cases, but elected officials worried that other patients were being denied this care.
State Sen. Anthony Portantino worked with colleagues to amend the law in 2019, clarifying that these treatments must be covered. Even so, insurers have been putting up roadblocks.
âSome of the insurers are taking a very strict approach that it has to be chemo,â said Portantino, who is a Democrat. For instance, patients who need cancer surgeries that could leave them infertile have faced denials.
Portantino said he plans to work with Californiaâs largest health insurance regulator to clarify that fertility preservation must be covered more broadly. If that does not work, he said he will turn to legislation once again.
Other regulators are trying to bolster enforcement on the front end. Health insurers submit annual filings to the states where they operate, detailing the treatments and services the company will and wonât cover. Regulators check these policies to figure out whether an insurer is complying with state mandates. In Vermont, the insurance department is using federal grant money to work with an outside company to improve these reviews. Through staff training and education, the department hopes to catch insurers not following state laws before Vermont residents face wrongful denials.
Not all health plans have to follow state mandates. About 65% of employees who get insurance through their jobs work for companies that pay directly for health care. Those companies often hire insurers solely to process claims. Known as self-funded plans, they are regulated by the federal government and exempt from state coverage requirements. Employers increasingly are turning to these types of plans, which tend to be cheaper, partly because they donât have to cover care that states require. (The federal government also imposes coverage mandates, but state laws can be more robust.)
For patients, this can mean fewer protections from denials.
When 57-year-old Sayeh Peterson, a nonsmoker, was diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer, her doctors ordered genetic testing to identify the cause. Those tests revealed that a rare gene mutation was, in fact, the culprit for Petersonâs disease and gave doctors the information they needed to create a treatment that targeted the mutation. Her state, Arizona, requires insurers to cover such testing, but Petersonâs UnitedHealthcare plan was self-funded by her husbandâs employer, so the law didnât apply. She and her husband were left with more than $12,000 in bills.
In response to questions, UnitedHealth spokesperson Maria Gordon Shydlo wrote that âthere is not enough medical evidence to support use of all those tests.â
As Peterson undergoes a treatment plan tailored to the genetic test results, she is continuing to appeal the denials months later. âWeâre told that we have this great insurance,â Peterson said. âBut then they deny coverage for the testing that determined what my treatment would be. How do you even get your head around this?â
