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McNaughton receives an infusion of medication to treat his ulcerative colitis at a medical facility in State College. After initially paying for his treatment, UnitedHealthcare began rejecting his insurance claims. Credit: Nate Smallwood, special to ProPublica.
Events

Medically Necessary

Health insurers reject about 1 in 7 claims to cover treatment, and patients rarely fight back. Join ProPublica reporters and outside experts to discuss America’s broken health insurance system.

In partnership with The Capitol Forum.

Health insurers have wide discretion in crafting what their policies cover, and they often deny claims for services they deem not “medically necessary.” An investigation by ProPublica and Capitol Forum revealed that Cigna, one of the largest health insurers in the country (and ProPublica’s insurance provider), built a system that allows its doctors to swiftly reject a claim on medical grounds without opening the patient file, leaving patients with unexpected bills. Using this method, one Cigna doctor single-handedly rejected 60,000 claims in a single month.

When UnitedHealthcare refused to pay for Christopher McNaughton's treatment, his family did something rare: they fought back. The ensuing lawsuit uncovered a trove of internal documents that gave ProPublica a behind-the-scenes look at how United Healthcare relentlessly fights to reduce spending on care, even as profits rise to record levels.

At this event, reporters and insiders will explain how health insurance companies approach and process patient claims, and how this is influenced by their bottom lines. Experts will also discuss patients’ rights and potential fixes for America’s broken health insurance industry. Speakers include:

  • T. Christian Miller, ProPublica senior editor (moderator)
  • David Rubin, professor of medicine and chief of gastroenterology, hepatology and nutrition at the University of Chicago Medicine
  • Maya Miller, ProPublica engagement reporter
  • Mona Shah, senior director of policy and strategy at Community Catalyst
  • Patrick Rucker, Capitol Forum reporter
  • Ron Howrigan, former Cigna executive and current president of Fulcrum Strategies, a health care consulting firm specializing in payer contract negotiation

This event has ended.