A Kaulkin Ginsberg Publication
Ontario
03/20/2010

LA Sues Insurer for Canceling Health Care Coverage

April 22, 2008
 

Thousands of Californians face unpaid medical bills, and possible health care debt, after insurance companies canceled coverage, according to a suit from the City of Los Angeles.

Digg!
What's this?
The City of Los Angeles is suing Anthem Blue Cross for unlawfully cancelling health coverage polices and denying and delaying benefits that left thousands of Californians with unpaid medical bills.

Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo filed suit last week in Los Angeles Superior Court, claiming that the insurer’s coverage is “large illusory.” It claims Anthem, its parent WellPoint, Inc. and a subsidiary, denied benefits to more than 6,000 people in “serious and often critical need of care.”

The suit also accuses the insurers of misleading more than 500,000 policyholders into buying coverage based on false advertising and promises. As a result, thousands more policyholders may not be covered for future medical treatment, leaving them with tens of thousand of dollars in medical debt, said Frank Mateljan, a spokesperson for Delgadillo’s office.

“There are people who think they’re insured and (the coverage) is not worth the paper it’s written on,” Mateljan said.

Delgadillo is seeking $2,500 per violation or $5,000 if the policy holder is a senior or disabled. Total fines and restitution could exceed $1 billion.
WellPoint did not return insideARM’s call, but a company spokesperson told the San Francisco Chronicle that WellPoint disagrees with the allegations and will defend itself.

In the suit, Delgadillo claims “Blue Cross collected applications from customers using intentionally misleading forms with little or no meaningful review of the accuracy of responses or informed investigation into the medical history of applicant. In addition, applicants were often assisted by untrained and unsupervised agents in completing the application, further complicating the process.”

The lawsuit claims that it was after members got sick and filed claims that the insurers reviewed the member’s application for minor or inadvertent errors that might justify cancelling coverage.

Delgadillo has also posted to his Web site a letter asking city residents if they have been denied coverage by health insurers.

In February Delgadillo filed a similar suit against Health Net of Sacramento, Calif., and opened a criminal investigation into the company’s alleged $35 million savings in medical expenses after illegally rescinding the policies of at least 1,600 policyholders. “The health insurance industry is not focused on truly improving our care,” he said in a press release. “The industry’s singular focus is on maximizing profits at the expense of patients and their doctors.”

Get Hired - jobsInsideARM.comHiring? Post a job - jobsInsideARM.com

Be the First To Comment

(Please read our comments policy first.)

From:
Show my identity with comment

Leave this field empty
Interested in more stories like this?
Tell us what topics you're interested in and we'll keep you posted. Enter your email address below.
You've Got Claims
Tracers
Interior Concepts
Interactive Data
  • DCM Services
  • Columbia Ultimate
  • Tracers
  • DAKCS
  • Interactive Data

Log In

Already registered? Log in here.





Forgot your password?

Register for FREE with insideARM

Create an account with insideARM and get access to our FREE newsletters and industry reports.










 

Check all | Uncheck all

Daily news and analysis
* Recommended *
Credit cards
Healthcare
Government/Municipal
Student loans
Mortgage
Auto finance
Collection agency operations
Collection technology
Debt purchasing
Recovery management
Hiring/Staffing
Job opportunities
Leave this field empty
 

You are already registered!

The email address you've entered is already in our database, meaning you've previously registered on insideARM.com.

All you have to do is log in using the form on the left.