MassHealth has higher claim denial rate than commercial insurers

June 23rd, 2009 | by Brian Schwartz |

From the Boston Globe:

The state government Medicaid plan known as MassHealth, which covers low-income patients who can’t afford insurance, was the slowest payer of health claims to Massachusetts doctors last year, averaging 56 days, and denied the highest share of claims, 23.8 percent, according to rankings set to be released today. …

…The rankings were prepared by Athenahealth Inc., a Watertown company that helps doctors handle billing and records electronically, in collaboration with the Physicians Practice management journal. …

On its ranking of “denial rates,” the percentage of claims rejected or sent back for rework, Tufts denied 4.9 percent, Harvard Pilgrim 5.4 percent, Fallon 5.7 percent, Blue Cross-Blue Shield 6.2 percent, and MassHealth 23.8 percent.

Read the whole article here.

Granted, some claims, such as fraudulent ones and those that do not fall under the specific insurance policy’s benefits, should be denied. But for the criticism I hear of commercial insurance companies denying claims, why do we not hear more complaints when government does the same?

Not to defend commercial insurance here, as they benefit from a tax code that discounts their plans, which shields them from competition. The point is that politicians should not be using policy to force us into dealing with any insurer.

(Hat tip, Pioneer Institute)

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  • Laura
    I've been trying to get insurance for just my two children. It's interesting to me that the 'compare' sites (ehealth, extend.org, etc).... will not provide that services for Mass residents. I feel like we're in a repeat of auto insurance where providers stayed out of Mass. and we ended up with higher rates until finally, the laws were revised to foster competition.

    I want to get catastrophic only medical insurance for my kids but instead it seems I can now only get plans which minimally cost 475-675 per month -- in short $6000.00 per year. When did that equate to affordable especially when they barely do two physicals per year. I want major medical!!! Where is that option now!??


    Brian replies:
    Apparently major medical insurance, i.e., catastrophic insurance is illegal in Massachusetts.

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