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U.S. to rein in algorithms for Medicare Advantage coverage decisions


Judith Sullivan was recovering from major surgery at a Connecticut nursing home in March when she got surprising news from her Medicare Advantage plan: It would no longer pay for her care because she was well enough to go home.

At the time, she could not walk more than a few feet, even with assistance — let alone manage the stairs to her front door, she said, and she still needed help using a colostomy bag after her operation.

“How could they make a decision like that without ever coming and seeing me?” said Sullivan, 76. “I still couldn’t walk without one physical therapist behind me and another next to me. Were they all coming home with me?”

UnitedHealthcare — the nation’s largest health insurance company, which provides Sullivan’s Medicare Advantage plan — doesn’t have a crystal ball. It does have NaviHealth, a care management company it bought in 2020, and one of several businesses that use predictive technology to help insurance companies make coverage decisions.

Its proprietary “NH Predict” tool sifts through millions of medical records to match patients with similar diagnoses and characteristics, including age, preexisting health conditions and other factors. Based on these comparisons, an algorithm anticipates what kind of care specific patients will need and for how long.

But patients, providers and patient advocates in several states said they have noticed a suspicious coincidence: The tool often predicts a patient’s date of discharge that coincides with the date their insurer cuts off coverage, even if the patient needs further treatment that government-run Medicare would provide.

“When an algorithm does not fully consider a patient’s needs, there’s a glaring mismatch,” said Rajeev Kumar, a physician and the president-elect of the Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine, which represents long-term-care practitioners. “That’s where human intervention comes in.”

The federal government will try to even the playing field next year, when the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services begins restricting how Medicare Advantage plans use predictive technology tools to make some coverage decisions. (New rules also crack down on plans’ misleading advertising.)

A $10,000 bill for 18 days of care

Medicare Advantage plans, an alternative to the government-run, original Medicare program, are operated by private insurance companies. About half the people eligible for full Medicare benefits are enrolled in the private plans, attracted by their lower costs and enhanced benefits such as dental care, hearing aids and nonmedical extras like transportation and home-delivered meals. But the plans must still follow Medicare coverage criteria and cannot deny benefits that original Medicare covers.

Insurers receive a monthly payment from the federal government for each enrollee, regardless of how much care they need. According to the Department of Health and Human Services’ inspector general, the arrangement raises “the potential incentive for insurers to deny access to services and payment in an attempt to increase profits.” Nursing home care has been among the most frequently denied services by the private plans — something original Medicare probably would cover, investigators found.

After UHC cut off her nursing home coverage, Sullivan’s medical team agreed with her that she wasn’t ready to go home and provided an additional 18 days of treatment. Her bill came to $10,406.36.

Beyond her mobility problems, “she also had a surgical wound that needed daily dressing changes” when UHC stopped paying for her nursing home care, said Debra Samorajczyk, a registered nurse and the administrator at the Bishop Wicke Health & Rehabilitation Center, the facility that treated Sullivan.

Sullivan’s coverage denial notice and NH Predict report did not mention wound care or her inability to climb stairs. Medicare would have most likely covered her continued care, said Samorajczyk.

Sullivan appealed twice but lost. She is considering whether to appeal to the next level, the Medicare Appeals Council, the last step before the case can be heard in federal court.

Sullivan’s experience is not unique. In February, Ken Drost’s Medicare Advantage plan, provided by Security Health Plan of Wisconsin, wanted to cut his coverage at a Wisconsin nursing home after 16 days, the same number of days NaviHealth predicted was necessary. But Drost, 88, who was recovering from hip surgery, needed help getting out of bed and walking. He stayed at the nursing home for an additional week, at a cost of $2,624.

After he appealed twice and lost, his hearing on his third appeal was about to begin when his insurer agreed to pay his bill, said his lawyer, Christine Huberty,…



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