Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted October 5, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted October 5, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up UnitedHealth sues CMS over Medicare Advantage star ratings This story was originally published on This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Recommended Reading ***** Brief: A group of UnitedHealth subsidiaries sued the Biden administration on Monday, arguing regulators unfairly dinged their Medicare Advantage quality or “star” ratings over one customer support phone call. The This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up by UnitedHealth MA plans in a variety of states accused the CMS of downgrading their stars based on an “arbitrary,” “capricious” and “unlawful” assessment of how a ****** call center handled a single call that lasted less than 10 minutes. The plans allege they could lose millions of dollars if customers depart due to the lower scores. The lawsuit asks the court to force the CMS to correct the ratings before open enrollment for MA begins later this month. ***** Insight: MA payers are increasingly taking to the courts with the hopes of revising unfavorable star ratings. UnitedHealth’s lawsuit follows two successful suits filed by This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up and This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , after CMS’ tweaks to star ratings calculations caused the insurers’ scores to fall. UnitedHealth’s suit is especially similar to Elevance’s, given both focus on customer service calls. Regulators calculate star ratings based on a variety of factors, including preventative care, member experience, health outcomes and customer service. In the customer service bucket, each MA plan must be able to provide specific information to seniors upon request, including through a call center. Such centers are held to certain standards, which the CMS evaluates through anonymous test calls. In order to receive five stars on the call center measure, centers must provide an interpreter within eight minutes of request for all incoming calls. The lawsuit filed by the plans, which share a call center operated by UnitedHealth, takes issue with a test call placed in French that regulators marked as unsatisfactory. UnitedHealth claims the call center connected the test call from the CMS as required within eight minutes. It also said the caller never asked an introductory question required by the assessment, and as such the call center employee did not provide the required response. “At no point did the CMS test caller ask the required introductory question,” the lawsuit reads. “Accordingly, there was no evidence on the record supporting the conclusion that the call should be counted against the Plaintiffs.” Story continues UnitedHealth appealed to the CMS to invalidate the call. Regulators did not invalidate it, scoring the affected plans four instead of five stars on the rating and “improperly [subjecting] the ******* plans to a different standard than those of the insurer Elevance,” the lawsuit alleges. Star ratings run from one to five stars and are meant to serve as a measure of plan quality, though This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Still, seniors use the ratings to compare plans when selecting Medicare coverage during the fall for the following year, so lower ratings could deter them from selecting a particular plan. The ratings also have a more direct impact on the financial success of a plan. Plans with higher ratings receive generous bonuses from the federal government, and are allowed to bid against a higher benchmark, giving them a competitive advantage against peers in their markets. Courts have generally sided with insurers that say CMS has unfairly prevented them from attaining their rightful quality scores. Following successful court rulings in the suits brought by Elevance and Scan, the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up early this summer. More than 60 MA plans from 40 insurers received a higher star rating as a result, according to a Healthcare ***** analysis — including some offered by UnitedHealth. The CMS also released preliminary data on MA star ratings for 2025 earlier this month. Most large plans offered by national insurers appear to have held onto their stars, according to analysts, with This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up On Wednesday, the company — the second-largest MA payer in the U.S. after UnitedHealth — disclosed that only 25% of its members would be in plans with at least four stars in 2025, down from 94% currently. Humana could lose billions of dollars as a result of the downgrade. The insurer is appealing the ratings for three of the four affected plans to the CMS. Humana’s appeal for one contract is related to its call center, management told sell-side investors during a Wednesday meeting, according to a note from Leerink Partners’ analyst ***** Mayo. UnitedHealth’s lawsuit was first reported by Bloomberg. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #UnitedHealth #sues #CMS #Medicare #Advantage #star #ratings This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/142497-unitedhealth-sues-cms-over-medicare-advantage-star-ratings/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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