The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Doctors call on legislatur­e to tackle prior authorizat­ion

- By Vincent Gabrielle

The Connecticu­t State Medical Society is taking aim at the health insurance industry’s practice of prior authorizat­ion this legislativ­e session. Prior authorizat­ion, also known as “precertifi­cation” or “prior approval” is an insurance industry costcontro­l process where health care providers must obtain advance approval from an insurance plan before care is provided.

In a video press conference Thursday, representa­tives of the Connecticu­t State Medical Society decried prior authorizat­ion as burdensome and disruptive for patients and caregivers alike.

“Originally prior authorizat­ion started for major procedures, like cardiac surgery or cancer treatments,” said Dr. Bob Russo, chief medical officer of CSMS. “Now it’s all across the board and there’s no uniformity to it [the process of prior authorizat­ion]”

Russo said that, in his experience, patients frequently experience­d problems in getting necessary medication­s due to prior authorizat­ion issues. For patients who take medication­s long term, insurance companies demand that prior authorizat­ions be renewed periodical­ly.

“We’ve had to maybe do two-to three prior authorizat­ions a month to 10 to 15 prior authorizat­ions a day for a primary care practice,” said Russo. “They’ve expanded it to where the burden is overwhelmi­ng for the practice.”

A 2021 American Medical Associatio­n survey of physicians found that 88 percent of doctors found the process of prior to be administra­tively burdensome. That same survey found 93 percent patients who were made to use prior authorizat­ion experience­d some delay of care.

In some cases these delays can be problemati­c. An article from the biomedical news site STAT outlines a case of a woman with fast-spreading cancer who was delayed by prior authorizat­ion issues for 38 days, resulting in multiple amputation­s.

“Yesterday it took me on the phone waiting for 40 minutes on hold while my patient is waiting disrobed for her procedure in an exam room,” said CSMS president Dr. David Hass. He explained that his patient has been having problems swallowing for over 6 months and that a procedure to open her esophagus had repeatedly been denied for prior authorizat­ion issues. “It was all because someone wasn’t reading the forms properly at the insurance company.”

Another point of contention for the doctors were prior authorizat­ion requiremen­ts that demanded patients try several medication­s before getting the one prescribed by their doctor, a process known as step therapy. This was particular­ly an issue for Hass’s patients with Crohn’s disease. It’s also a common problem in migraine care.

According to the doctors, prior authorizat­ion can also delay discharge from a hospital to a longterm care facility or nursing home.

“There’s no ability on the part of our hospitals to get prior authorizat­ion on a weekend,” said Dr. David Emmel, chair of CSMS’s legislativ­e committee. “They have to hold patients at enormous expense to the hospital, wait until Monday, and then get prior authorizat­ion. That’s entirely preventabl­e.”

Representa­tives of CSMS said that they hoped that Senate Bill 6 would help address these issues by including language to reduce the burden prior authorizat­ion pose to doctors and patients. They hoped for bipartisan consensus for tacking this issue.

“We’ve proposed a number of solutions that the state can pursue,” said Emmel. He outlined programs that had worked in other states, like unified standards for insurance providers, 24/7 prior authorizat­ion processing, and an end to step therapy. “We are asking the legislatur­e to move forward with this as part of Connecticu­t’s package.”

 ?? Ned Gerard/Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? The state Capitol, in Hartford, shown on Jan 24.
Ned Gerard/Hearst Connecticu­t Media The state Capitol, in Hartford, shown on Jan 24.

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