Business

North Carolina doctors sue UnitedHealthcare

For the second time this year, the state medical society targets an insurer.

By Robert Kazel — Posted June 7, 2004

Print  |   Email  |   Respond  |   Reprints  |   Like Facebook  |   Share Twitter  |   Tweet Linkedin

The North Carolina Medical Society has filed suit against UnitedHealthcare of North Carolina.

The lawsuit, filed May 14 in Wake County Superior Court, accuses United of some of the same improper business practices alleged in an earlier suit by the medical society against BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina.

The medical society requests the judge's assistance in curbing practices the society says are "designed to delay, deny, impede and reduce lawful reimbursement."

Medical society leaders met in January with United executives to present their grievances, but the talks haven't produced results. "We were discussing things, but we were not resolving things," Robert Seligson, executive vice president and CEO of the NCMS.

Neither the suit against United nor the one against the Blues plan asks the court for monetary damages for doctors. "This isn't about money; it's about trying to solve problems," Seligson said.

The complaint accuses the plan of bundling and downcoding claims, failing to recognize modifiers on CPT codes and systematically denying payments to doctors for medically necessary claims. The society also says United continues to maintain an "all products" policy requiring that doctors participate in all or none of its product lines; that doctors are no longer able to get a coverage decision from the plan before performing a medical service; and that confidentiality clauses in contracts ban physicians from discussing payment for disputed claims with other doctors. (See correction.)

A spokesman for UnitedHealth Group, the health plan's Minnesota-based parent, expressed disappointment. "We have worked extensively with the medical society to resolve the issues they've raised, and we believe for just about every issue they've raised concerns we've taken substantial efforts to address all the concerns," said spokesman Mark Lindsay.

Back to top


ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISE HERE


Featured
Read story

Confronting bias against obese patients

Medical educators are starting to raise awareness about how weight-related stigma can impair patient-physician communication and the treatment of obesity. Read story


Read story

Goodbye

American Medical News is ceasing publication after 55 years of serving physicians by keeping them informed of their rapidly changing profession. Read story


Read story

Policing medical practice employees after work

Doctors can try to regulate staff actions outside the office, but they must watch what they try to stamp out and how they do it. Read story


Read story

Diabetes prevention: Set on a course for lifestyle change

The YMCA's evidence-based program is helping prediabetic patients eat right, get active and lose weight. Read story


Read story

Medicaid's muddled preventive care picture

The health system reform law promises no-cost coverage of a lengthy list of screenings and other prevention services, but some beneficiaries still might miss out. Read story


Read story

How to get tax breaks for your medical practice

Federal, state and local governments offer doctors incentives because practices are recognized as economic engines. But physicians must know how and where to find them. Read story


Read story

Advance pay ACOs: A down payment on Medicare's future

Accountable care organizations that pay doctors up-front bring practice improvements, but it's unclear yet if program actuaries will see a return on investment. Read story


Read story

Physician liability: Your team, your legal risk

When health care team members drop the ball, it's often doctors who end up in court. How can physicians improve such care and avoid risks? Read story

  • Stay informed
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn