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PART
III
Another favorite
approach: Second-guessing your doctor
Policies specify that insurers may ask claimants to
be examined by doctors the companies select. That's
because many disabilities are short term, and the independent
medical exam (IME) "can be an appropriate means of determining
whether a disability persists," says UnumProvident's
Christopher Collins. The problem, critics say, is that
insurers sometimes send you to doctor after doctor until
one agrees that you're no longer disabled.
"When there is strong objective evidence that a condition
exists, multiple IMEs don't occur," responds Howard
Rosen, a Union Central executive. "But we're getting
more and more subjective or self-reported claims, especially
from doctors who have self-treated." Adds Union Central's
Ray Kowalczyk, "When there are several diagnoses, we'd
get several specialists. For example, if someone has
a cervical/back injury, we'd send him to both a neurologist
and an orthopedist. If depression was involved, we'd
include a psychiatrist."
Claimants and their attorneys also say insurers lean
toward IME doctors known to favor insurers. Attorney
Darras cites a case where an insurer's written request
for an IME of a man who was claiming total disability
bore the notation, "This one will be difficult. Basically,
I need someone to indicate [he] is capable of doing
something."
Doctors who do IMEs can also be financially motivated
to give insurers the opinions they want. "They can make
$400,000 to $600,000 a year just doing IMEs part time,"
says Richard J. Quadrino, a Garden City, NY, attorney.
"They wouldn't keep getting work if they found the claimants
to be disabled."
Union Central's Kowalczyk disagrees, saying his company
wouldn't use a doctor whose IME reports heavily favored
the insurer. In fact, Kowalczyk says, roughly half of
his company's IME reports favor claimants. Union Central
uses an outside service that arranges IMEs and finds
board-certified doctors to perform them. So does Massachusetts
Mutual. UnumProvident selects IMEs themselves and leans
toward board-certified doctors in a university setting,
because "it's likely they'll be current on the condition
they're evaluating," says McCall.
No matter how well-intentioned an insurer might be,
though, sometimes the IME falls short. Attorney Rafel
tells about a radiologist who suffered from premacular
gliosis and malignant myopia and could no longer distinguish
shades of gray. The insurer denied benefits after its
independent medical examiner had him read an eye chart
and declared him not disabled.
In response, Rafel set up a meeting with her client
and another radiologist who brought in 10 X-rays. Her
client misdiagnosed seven. Rafel taped the session and
sent the tape to the insurer. Her client got his benefits.
Related to the independent medical exam is the functional
capacity evaluation (FCE), a test designed to measure
limitations. It simulates the demands on a person's
body by requiring him to perform physically demanding,
repetitive, and stressful activities such as weight-pulling
and ladder-climbing. Insurers say the test helps expose
false or exaggerated claims.
"An FCE puts the claimant in a no-win situation," says
Quadrino. "If you say, 'Ouch, I can't do it,' the therapist
will say you're exaggerating your injuries. If you fight
through the pain and do the task, they'll say you're
not disabled." And Surrano points out that even though
you might be able to perform a task once, you probably
can't do it repetitively if you're disabled, as you
might need to do in your work.
In a deposition for Smith's lawsuit, Robert Coddington,
the physician who did the claim review for Provident,
admitted that he didn't believe a therapist conducting
an FCE could judge whether a person being tested for
fine motor skills, as Smith was, has the appropriate
degree of "feel and touch." He also admitted that without
the "proper feel and dexterity," an anesthesiologist
could cause a permanent or even fatal injury to a patient.
Attorneys say that disability contracts don't specify
that FCEs be performed. Insurers say they do, under
the independent medical exam stipulation.
How to protect yourself:
If you know there's a problem with the IME doctor
the insurer wants to send you to—a license problem,
for instance, or malpractice history, or a pro-insurer
bias—you should inform the company before the exam and
ask for a new examiner, Darras says. Quadrino says he
has occasionally suggested that his client's physician
and the insurer's in-house physician agree on a doctor
for the IME. "A couple of times, they did," Quadrino
says. But you can't count on that kind of cooperation.
No matter what physician performs the IME, keep a careful
record of what transpires. "Tape record the entire exam
and offer to share the tape with the insurer," advises
Darras. "There shouldn't be any objection to that, and
it eliminates the he-said, she-said aspect." After the
exam, make a note of the tests that were ordered and
those that weren't, and of what questions should have
been asked but weren't. This information could be useful
even if your claim is accepted, because you might eventually
face another IME.
Alternatively, Andrew L. Miller, an attorney in Bala
Cynwyd, PA, always sends a nurse or physician's assistant
with a client to an IME, to witness the exam. If the
IME doctor objects, Miller asks the insurer to assign
another.
The insurer isn't obliged to share IME results with
you or your doctor, but it may agree to. "If you're
denying a claim based on an IME exam and you don't share
the results, you have something to hide," Darras says.
In Diamond's case, the insurer's IME had, in fact, found
him totally disabled. But General American hadn't shared
this information with Diamond; instead, it cut off his
benefits.
Kowalczyk says Union Central will share results with
an attending physician, at the claimant's request. Gish
says that if a claims decision is based on the result
of an IME, "Massachusetts Mutual will definitely contact
the attending physician before making the decision."
Make sure you're not your
own worst enemy
In certain situations, the insurer can use your own
actions against you. Two examples:
You on videotape.
Insurers use video surveillance when they suspect
a supposedly disabled person is doing things such as
golfing or gardening, or other things he shouldn't be
able to do if he were disabled. "We use it in less than
1 percent of cases," says Jeff McCall of UnumProvident.
Union Central sometimes does surveillance of claimants
whose work involves strenuous physical activity, "or
if we've been tipped off that someone is faking," says
Kowalczyk. But anesthesiologist Sidney Smith couldn't
figure out what an insurer could learn about his disabled
hand by videotaping his daily walk. "Some people take
a daily walk to a business they have on the side," says
Kowalczyk.
How to protect yourself:
Should you find yourself starring in such a
production, all is not lost. To begin with, Darras points
out, total disability, according to many insurance policies,
"is not a state of helplessness, but the inability to
perform the duties of your occupation with reasonable
continuity in the usual way," regardless of whether
you can pick up a child or a bag of groceries. Furthermore,
you may have done this activity under heavy medication,
or perhaps paid a price by suffering excruciating pain
for hours or days afterward.
Although you might be able to explain the activity
if you saw the tapes, the insurer isn't obliged to share
them; typically, the tapes aren't produced until a courtroom
showdown. Your treating physician might be able to get
them, though, Darras suggests, by saying something like,
"If he's not being truthful, I don't want him as a patient."
Darras adds that relying on videotape to deny coverage
means that the insurer might be ignoring objective evidence
such as MRIs, X-rays, and treating physicians' notes.
This violates the duty to evaluate claims fairly and
to consider all the evidence. In one case, the judge
said that if an insurer "seeks to discover only the
evidence that defeats the claim, it holds its own interest
above that of its insured."
The ERISA charge.
Did you pay the premiums for your disability
coverage, or did your practice? If you file a lawsuit
against your insurer, that's the first thing the insurer
will look at, says Darras. If your employer or corporation
paid the premiums, the suit may be litigated under the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). Legal
remedies are limited to benefits owed and, sometimes,
attorney's fees. Typically, no awards are made for emotional
distress or punitive damages. The case is heard by a
federal judge, but no jury. The judge looks only at
the evidence in the administrative record.
How to protect yourself:
If you're covered by a group policy, arrange
to pay the premiums yourself, Darras suggests. If you
can't, he advises, take out an additional individual
policy. In the meantime, the laws are changing. Some
courts recently ruled that ERISA could be pre-empted
when someone covered by a group policy has filed a bad-faith
lawsuit.
Your own claim may well encounter none of these obstacles,
but preparing for the worst seems advisable. Says anesthesiologist
Sidney Smith, "I felt that the claims process had absolutely
no protection for the policyholder, and only the threat
of court, the skill of my lawyers, and the weakness
of the insurer's case eventually made them pay attention
to me."
The author is a former Senior Editor of Medical
Economics.
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