The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services should enhance its oversight of Medicare Advantage organization contracts and address persistent problems related to inappropriate denial of services and payment, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General said in a report yesterday. When beneficiaries and providers appealed preauthorization and payment denials, MA organizations overturned 75 percent of their own denials between 2014 and 2016, OIG found. During the same period, independent reviewers at higher levels of the appeals process overturned additional denials in favor of beneficiaries and providers. “The high number of overturned denials raises concerns that some Medicare Advantage beneficiaries and providers were initially denied services and payments that should have been provided,” OIG said. “This is especially concerning because beneficiaries and providers rarely used the appeals process, which is designed to ensure access to care and payment.”

Headline
Members of Congress and hospital and health system leaders today gathered for a briefing in Washington, D.C., to discuss how payment delays in Medicare…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services May 28 issued a final rule making changes to the Increasing Organ Transplant Access Model beginning July 1.…
Perspective
Public
Approximately 35 million Americans are enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans in 2026, and that number is expected to grow to about 45 million MA enrollees by…
Blog
Public
Patients are best served when insurers act as transparent and reasonable partners, not when they invoke patient protection laws to justify payment strategies…
Headline
The AHA May 7 wrote to House and Senate lawmakers in support of the Medicare Advantage Improvement Act (H.R. 8375/S. 4384), bipartisan and bicameral…
Headline
For families living in poverty, accessing health care can feel out of reach — buried beneath challenges like transportation, childcare and job insecurity…