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PART
II
Are insurers fighting fraud,
or denying claims unfairly?
What happened to Sidney Smith and Ronald Diamond wasn't
unusual, says Art Fries, a disability claims consultant
in Newport Beach, CA. After paying benefits for a while,
a company may ask the claimant to submit to an independent
medical exam and, soon afterward, stop payment, saying
the person is no longer disabled. "This is a strategy
to see if the claimant will meekly accept the conclusion
and go away, or complain, or hire an attorney," Fries
notes. "Many times it becomes a game to see who can
move the most paper and whether the claimant can be
worn down."
Insurers say, however, that they pay most claims without
a problem. "We sell a promise to pay; we are here to
pay claims," comments Todd Gish, a disability executive
with Massachusetts Mutual Life.
UnumProvident strives to resolve claims "in a timely
fashion," says Vice President Jeff McCall. Christopher
Collins, another UnumProvident executive, notes that
the company pays $3 billion annually in disability claims.
Of that, $700 million a year goes to physicians. Currently
UnumProvident has about 12,000 open physician claims
and about 250,000 policies on doctors, says Collins.
The insurer says Sidney Smith's case is an exception.
"The number of cases that end up in litigation is a
micropercentage of claims that are paid," notes Mark
Davenport, a Dallas attorney who represents UnumProvident
and many other insurers in claims litigation.
Whether insurers are just aggressively protecting themselves
against fraud or are unfairly denying claims is debatable.
But either way, for policyholders, the result is the
same: If you become disabled, your right to receive
benefits may be challenged. You might, for example,
find yourself charged with making a claim not because
you're truly disabled but because you're tired of long
hours, stress, or managed care.
In fact, Robert Coddington, a physician who reviews
claims for UnumProvident on a consulting basis, had
raised the question of whether there was a managed care
issue in Smith's case, because the doctor had resigned
from his anesthesia position about a month before he
injured his hand. "There are a lot of crazy things going
on in medicine these days with hospitals opening and
closing, managed care organizations starting, stopping,
going bankrupt," Coddington said in a deposition for
Smith's lawsuit.
So what's a doctor to do?
"When you file a claim, the burden is on you to prove
your disability," says Bonny Rafel, a Florham Park,
NJ, attorney. The key to making a claim stick is submitting
the right medical, occupational, and financial information
in a timely manner.
State regulations spell out time limits for approvals,
denials, and paying benefits, and for levels of proof
required. By the end of your policy's waiting period,
typically 90 days, the insurer is required, based on
the proof you've supplied, to start paying benefits
immediately. Don't count on that happening, though.
"I've seen claimants haggling for six months or longer
before their checks start coming," Surrano says.
Delays aren't always the company's fault. "We often
experience long waits for statements and medical records
from attending physicians," says Ray Kowalczyk, a senior
claims official at Union Central Life Insurance.
But even if your physicians send in all the paperwork
promptly, you might experience roadblocks such as the
ones that follow. Here's a game plan to help you get
around them and collect what you're entitled to.
Two ways an insurer may disqualify
your claim
Your disability policy contains more than one potential
escape hatch for your insurer. For instance, when you
file a claim, you may find yourself facing:
The dual-occupation
charge. An
insurer may try to nullify your own-occupation clause
by claiming that when your disability began, you were
doing something different or had two occupations. For
example, if you were handling administrative aspects
of your practice, the insurer might say that treating
patients wasn't your only occupation.
That's what happened several years ago, when a New
York dentist developed a progressive skeletal illness
and was no longer able to treat patients. He filed a
disability claim with Berkshire Life, which refused
to pay full benefits because the dentist could still
do administrative work. The dentist sued, and trial
and appeal courts agreed that Berkshire was guilty of
breach of contract, saying that in New York a claimant
is totally disabled when he is no longer able to perform
his job's "material" and "substantial" responsibilities.
The dentist had spent most of his time treating patients.
His gross revenues hadn't suffered severely, since he'd
hired another dentist to take his place, but the court
noted that disability policies in New York protect against
"loss of capacity to work, not against loss of income."
How to protect yourself:
Don't limit yourself to the claim form's
small spaces, which imply that short answers such as
"physician" or "back injury" will suffice. "Such answers
become the sword of the carrier in defining your occupation
and disability," says Rafel. She advises appending complete
answers to the form, to demonstrate the seriousness
of your case.
Include details of how you spent your average workday
before the disability, then list what duties of your
occupation the disability prevents you from performing.
State how many hours a week you normally worked, and
how the disability affects that. Advises Rafel: "Share
this information, in writing, with your physician so
that he's prepared to respond to the insurer's queries.
Inform the insurance company that your staff runs your
office. Describe the staff. Avoid the typical doctor's
mistake of saying you 'run the practice.' Otherwise,
the company may decide you have a dual occupation and
don't qualify for benefits because you can still do
administrative work at your practice. Remember, you
got the insurance to protect your ability to perform
medical procedures, not schedule patients, tally bills,
or handle office politics."
Says Darras, "If you think you might be heading for
a disability claim, give up your medical directorship
well before you file. Or if you're shedding duties because
of impairment, be careful you don't fall into the role
of office administrator or business owner."
The pre-existing-condition
charge. Typically, policies exclude coverage
for a pre-existing condition if an incident related
to that condition occurs within two years of the date
you bought the policy. So expect the insurer to look
for symptoms of your current condition that may have
surfaced before the policy began. "If your injury or
illness bears the slightest resemblance to, or shares
even one symptom with, a condition you had before your
policy began, the insurer may insist that your claim
resulted from a pre-existing condition," says Darras.
How to protect yourself:
Make sure the doctors treating you give detailed descriptions
of your disability, treatments, and test results, and
how the condition restricts your work. They should be
clear about when the condition began.
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