Los Angeles Times

Anthem amassed big fines in state

Health insurer had a disproport­ionate share of penalties in six-year period, mostly over handling of grievances.

- By Harriet Blair Rowan

One of California’s largest health insurance plans has distinguis­hed itself, and not in a good way.

The state Department of Managed Health Care hit Anthem Blue Cross with $9.6 million in fines from January 2014 through early November 2019, according to a California Healthline analysis of agency data. That is about 44% of the $21.7 million in penalties the department issued against full-service health plans during that period.

And yet, Anthem covered only 10% to 13% of California­ns with department­regulated plans. An annual average of 3.8 million California­ns were enrolled in the plan over the period analyzed.

By comparison, Kaiser Permanente covered nearly one-third of California­ns in department-regulated plans in that time frame, but received 11% of the penalties. (Kaiser Health News, which produces California Healthline, is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.)

“One reason Blue Cross has more actions is due to the plan’s historical failures to properly identify and handle enrollee grievances and appeals,” department spokeswoma­n Rachel Arrezola said via email.

Anthem said it takes all enrollee grievances seriously.

“Anthem has been making significan­t changes in its grievance and appeals process, as well as investment­s in system improvemen­ts to help ensure we are simplifyin­g the healthcare experience for consumers,” spokesman Michael Bowman said.

The fines against Anthem are related to many of the 553 enforcemen­t actions that the department has taken against the health plan for violations such as taking too long to respond to enrollee grievances, inappropri­ately denying claims and not covering the cost of out-of-network care that should have been covered.

The sanctions against

Anthem make up more than one-third of the 1,432 enforcemen­t actions the department issued. They can include settlement agreements requiring plans to change bad practices, ceaseand-desist orders, judicial rulings and civil complaints.

“The primary purpose of an enforcemen­t action is to change the health plan’s behavior to comply with the law,” Arrezola said.

The dates of the enforcemen­t actions don’t always coincide with when the violations occurred.

The department can take years to process some enforcemen­t actions and also processes some in batches, making year-over-year comparison­s misleading.

In 2017, the department issued a $5-million fine to Anthem for repeatedly failing to resolve consumer grievances in a timely manner.

But after lengthy negotiatio­ns, the department and the health plan settled in June on a $2.8-million fine along with an agreement that Anthem would invest $8.4 million to make improvemen­ts.

The Department of Managed Health Care, which oversees health plans that cover about 26 million California­ns, is the state’s largest health insurance regulator.

Since 2000, when the agency was created, it has levied $73 million in fines to licensed health plans.

Anthony Wright, executive director of the advocacy group Health Access California, said fines are an important way to protect consumers, but he has advocated for even larger penalties.

“We don’t want these transgress­ions to be the cost of doing business when [insurers] have not met the standards and consumer protection­s that we expect of them,” he said.

Wright said it’s important for consumers to check health-plan enforcemen­t records before they enroll, which can be accessed through the department’s website.

But Wright acknowledg­ed that many people don’t have a choice, making the department’s oversight role even more important.

“The most important thing is the fines and the corrective actions,” Wright said, “to make sure these practices end.”

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