Colorado's top insurance regulator says he almost ordered Bright Health to cease all operations in the state following dozens of consumer and provider complaints.
Payer
The Georgetown University Health Policy Institute's Center for Families and children estimates that 6.7 million children are at high risk of losing Medicaid coverage when the COVID-19 public health emergency ends.
An Idaho woman and her spouse filed a lawsuit against Anthem April 13 for allegedly violating the Employee Retirement Income Security Act by improperly processing their medical claims.
The Centene board accepted the resignation of Leslie Norwalk April 15.
As payers look to increase health equity and outcomes among their members, some are improving or developing strategies to collect better data surrounding race and ethnicity.
Bright Health announced April 14 it would cease operations in six states after 2022, but the departure marks just one part of a tough year so far for the Minneapolis-based insurtech company.
Kansas paid managed care organizations $193 million for idle home and community-based service program beneficiaries, the Medicaid inspector general reported April 13.
Black, Hispanic, female and low-income individuals may face health inequities because of how they contribute to health savings accounts, according to an Employee Benefit Research Institute study reported by CNBC.
From lawsuit wins and losses to a new CEO, here are seven recent headlines about the St. Louis-based payer:
A federal judge in California has reduced the chances of a proposed class action moving forward from drug abuse and mental health treatment providers against United Behavioral Health for allegedly denying coverage for medically necessary treatments.
