The U.S. Department of Labor is suing a subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group over allegations that the company wrongly denied thousands of claims to pay health care providers for emergency room services and urinary drug screenings.
Denial of the ER claims was based solely on diagnosis codes, the government alleges, rather than a "prudent layperson" standard that's required by health plan documents.
The lawsuit, filed this week in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin, says the UnitedHealth Group division should have applied a medical necessity standard to claims for urinary drug screening, but instead "applied no standard and simply denied all the claims."
It names as defendant UMR Inc., a Wausau-based division of UnitedHealth Group that provides third-party administrator services to more than 2,100 self-insured health plans, the government says in the lawsuit.
UnitedHealth Group, based in Minnetonka, says the government's complaint deals with administrative processes that are no longer in place.
"We have been in ongoing conversations with the [Labor Department] regarding this matter and will continue to defend our position vigorously," the company said in a statement.
Emergency physicians who, two years ago, succeeded in stopping a UnitedHealth Group proposal to halt payments for nonemergency care in ERs said issues raised in the new litigation fit with a broader pattern.
"Large insurance companies continue to do all they can to deny, delay or reduce payments for emergency care," Dr. Christopher Kang, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians, said in a statement. "Immediate action to strengthen enforcement of the prudent layperson standard and other existing laws can help hold insurers responsible for their rampant bad behavior and protect patient access to emergency care."