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A federal judge in California says a carrier that insures and administers an employee benefit plan should give clear information about fighting denials, especially if the plan offers only one level of appeal.
U.S. District Judge Dean Pregerson has agreed to review a denial decision in Los Angeles from scratch, rather than looking only for abuse of discretion, because, he says, the initial denial letter tended to show a conflict of interest that breached the carriers fiduciary obligations to the beneficiary.
To comply with the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, "the initial denial letter must be precise, unambiguous, and clearly articulate any procedural or medical reasons for the denial," Pregerson writes in an opinion on the case, Olive vs. American Express Long Term Disability Benefit Plan, et al.
The ruling deals only with procedural issues and not with the merits of the case.
The plaintiff in the case, Ruth Olive, belonged to a group long-term disability insurance plan insured and administered by an affiliate of MetLife Inc., New York.
Olive filed an LTD claim in 1999, after she underwent abdominal surgery and suffered a serious infection.
An October 1999 initial denial letter told Olive that she would have to be unable to perform any and every duty of her own occupation, and require the regular care of a doctor, to qualify for benefits.