Doctors and hospitals love to hate health insurers' efforts to manage care, but the board of America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) says carriers should start to reactivate care management programs.
Many health insurers suspended some or all active care management programs as health care providers were mobilizing to fight the COVID-19 pandemic. Some let up on care management as part of their own emergency planning, in compliance with state mandates, or through responses to state emergency planners' requests.
Now, bringing those care management programs back online will be a part of safely re-opening the U.S. health care system, the AHIP board says in a statement.
Health insurers often use procedures such as precertification and preauthorization to manage enrollees' use of health coverage, by deciding ahead of time whether proposed procedures are appropriate for a patient, and whether the patient's plan will cover the procedures.
Health insurers waived preapproval requirements, and other administrative requirements, in March, to ease burdens on health care providers.
Some health care providers are still struggling with a surge in patients with severe cases of COVID-19, and health insurers want to continue to help those providers cope with capacity challenges, the AHIP board says.
As health care providers in less hard-hit areas get back to normal, health insurers will bring back preauthorization and precertification programs for those providers, the AHIP board says.