UnitedHealth’s Optum Sticking Behavioral Health Docs With Payment Delays, Threatening Patient Care and Clinician Solvency
As my colleague Joey Rettino wrote earlier this week, health insurance companies’ provider networks are plagued with ghosts, especially when it comes to mental and behavioral health. Numerous studies have shown that in many cases, more than half of the providers listed are not seeing new patients or are no longer in the insurers’ networks. But patients aren’t the only ones getting the short end of the stick from companies like UnitedHealthcare. The country’s mental health providers are getting shafted, too.
According to a complaint first published on ClearHealthCosts by Jeanne Pinder, The American Psychological Association and the American Psychiatric Association wrote in a letter to Dr. Amar A. Desai, CEO of UnitedHealth Group’s Optum Health, that Optum’s pre-payment reviews (PPRs) are "unsustainable," and that the “enormous financial and administrative strains" are driving some clinicians to stop accepting insurance altogether.
PPRs are a process in which health insurers or their vendors or sister companies, like UnitedHealthGroup’s Optum, require physician practices to submit extensive documentation — such as medical records and treatment notes — before they’ll pay claims for services rendered. For clinicians, this adds administrative burdens and payment delays.
Small practices with limited financial and administrative resources are especially vulnerable. Instead of being able to focus on caring for patients, they’re drowning in paperwork, waiting months to be paid, if at all. The joint letter reads:
American Psychological Association Services and the American Psychiatric Association write to urge that you cease nationwide the recent barrage of prepayment reviews (PPRs) that Optum has inflicted on our members. We have grave concerns about how – during the nation’s continued mental health crisis and heightened concerns about patient privacy – these PPRs may disproportionately impact mental health patients’ access to care, and unnecessarily put their privacy at risk in a way that we believe violates the HIPAA minimum necessary rule. These PPRs have even caused some patients to stop treatment.
The financial strain is so severe that 44% of psychologists surveyed said these delays threaten their solvency. This is not just a minor inconvenience — it's a direct attack on mental health care delivery at a time when the nation is in the grips of a mental health crisis.
This bureaucratic hurdle is another way UnitedHealth and other Big Insurance corporations are violating the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, which requires them to treat mental health care the same as physical health care. UnitedHealth knows this is the result of PPRs, in fact they are happy with this result because it keeps them from having to actually pay for their customers’ care.
UnitedHealth Group, via Optum, is making it nearly impossible for clinicians to keep their doors open and serve their patients. As Pinder points out, patients are pausing or stopping treatment because of these delays. When clinicians are forced to navigate Optum’s labyrinthine reviews instead of focusing on their patients’ care, everyone loses.
As a VP over revenue cycle for a midwestern hospital system, I really feel this. The delays are unbelievable these days. You have the pre-service reviews (prior authorizations), then post-service but pre-paying reviews (like in this piece), then post-payment reviews...it's just a constant battle to get money in the door and your only real recourse is to either cancel the contract or you could request interest on the delayed payments but that's pennies to a company liked United
There is no doubt the insurance industry and the public essentially collude to minimize the resources allocated to mental health care. The public contributes to the problem because most people consider themselves to be mentally OK and they do not like to pay for others mental health problems.
I do want to pick one nit. The letter from the psychologists and psychiatrists states...."at a time when the nation is in the grips of a mental health crisis." This attempts to magnify the urgency of the current situation by stating we are in a crisis. Many people are in crisis but the problem for society is a chronic one, not an unexpected explosion of mental illness. We do not help our credibility by exaggerating or misstating the issue.
Mark Brakke, MD
MN