Health insurance companies would lose significant power over patients in Minnesota if lawmakers approve limits on the use of prior authorization for treatments and medications.
The House voted to prevent prior authorization reviews of many treatments for cancer and mental disorders, and eliminate redundant reviews for chronically ill people with unchanged treatment needs. The Senate so far has favored a smaller package of reforms. Both chambers would extend existing limits on prior authorization reviews to the state’s Medical Assistance and MinnesotaCare programs.
Rep. Kristin Bahner, DFL-Maple Grove, said she has been fighting for years to enact these limits. She used to work in a prior authorization unit for an insurance company and coached people to get through the process because she thought it was cumbersome and stacked against them.
One elderly man had to fight for cream for toenail fungus, she recalled. “I just remember all of the hoops he had to jump through. I was like, ‘You know, if this was my grandfather, would I want him to have to navigate these really difficult and complex waters in order to get something so simple?’”
Prior authorization is practically a four-letter word when it comes to public opinion and the way it can disrupt recommended care. A recent national survey found that 16% of all insured adults had experienced problems with the review process.
But it’s also a tool that insurance companies say limits wasteful or unnecessary medical spending, keeping health insurance premiums from rising even faster.
A leader of Minnesota’s health insurance industry said he supports the expansion of prior authorization deadlines to state programs, including the five-day limit on standard reviews. But Lucas Nesse, chief executive of the Minnesota Council of Health Plans, said he fears that other proposed limits could inflate costs for patients. Broadening the limits on treatments of chronic diseases could be particularly expensive, when considering the frequency of these conditions, he said. One in 10 Minnesotans has diabetes and three in 10 have hypertension, according to a state health dashboard.
“Prior authorization is an extremely important process,” he said, and double-checks doctors to make sure prescriptions won’t interact harmfully with other drugs and patients have access to the most affordable treatments.