Modern Healthcare

Aetna seeks court sanction of Mednax for allegedly destroying evidence

- By Nona Tepper

AETNA HAS ASKED a federal court to issue sanctions against a large neonatal services supplier, alleging the company failed to protect records relevant to a $50 million billing dispute.

The insurer filed a memorandum to the U.S. District Court of Pennsylvan­ia last week, saying Mednax failed to save thousands of emails related to claims that it was overchargi­ng Aetna for services, despite knowledge of Aetna’s legal complaint. Mednax’s internal billing and coding system, named BabySteps, automatica­lly deletes emails after 90 days unless lawyers place a “litigation hold” on the correspond­ence.

Charles Lynch, senior vice president of finance and strategy at Mednax, said the company disputes the claims in Aetna’s motion and plans to file a brief in response soon. “Mednax has not destroyed or otherwise spoliated evidence in this case, which is itself without basis,” Lynch wrote in an email.

Aetna declined to comment on the pending lawsuit.

According to Aetna’s complaint, in January 2015, the insurer contacted Mednax over a suspicion that the company was exaggerati­ng the severity of the clinical condition of its newborn patients and ordering unnecessar­y tests.

Over the next year, Aetna said it met with Mednax multiple times to share a statistica­l analysis of the company’s billing practices. In response, the lawsuit states that Mednax hired numerous outside lawyers, who met with Mednax’s inhouse counsel to discuss litigation holds, among other things.

Aetna said lawyers told them that pausing the system that automatica­lly deletes emails “slipped through the cracks.”

As a result of Mednax deleting the emails, Aetna said it is “severely prejudiced” and asked the court to implement adverse inference, which means it may hold Mednax’s silence against it. ●

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