logo
Health insurers to work on easing prior authorization requirements, AHIP says

Health insurers to work on easing prior authorization requirements, AHIP says

Reuters7 days ago

June 23 (Reuters) - America's Health Insurance Plans said on Monday that U.S. health insurers will take additional measures to simplify their requirements for prior approval on medicines and medical services.
Health insurers will work to develop standardized data and submission requirements for electronic prior authorization by January 1, 2027, the industry trade group said in a statement.
The firms will also work on reducing the scope of claims that require prior authorization by January 1, 2026, and ensure the authorizations are valid for a 90-day period if the patient changes insurance companies during the course of treatment.
U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Mehmet Oz are scheduled to discuss health insurance reforms in a press conference later in the day.
"The health care system remains fragmented and burdened by outdated manual processes, resulting in frustration for patients and providers alike," AHIP CEO Mike Tuffin said.
Separately, CVS Health's (CVS.N), opens new tab insurance unit Aetna announced a series of measures on Monday.
This included the move to bundle multiple authorization requests into one upfront approval for people with lung, breast or prostate cancer who need such authorizations for MRI or CT scans.
The killing of the head of UnitedHealth's (UNH.N), opens new tab insurance unit last year had ignited significant social media backlash from Americans struggling to receive and pay for medical care.
UnitedHealth had said in March it would ease requirements to get insurance authorization when renewing prescriptions on about 80 drugs, aiming to eliminate up to 25% of reauthorization requirements.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Joe Rogan reveals his huge fears about bread in America
Joe Rogan reveals his huge fears about bread in America

Daily Mail​

time31 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Joe Rogan reveals his huge fears about bread in America

Joe Rogan has voiced fears about the ingredients used in bread in America, warning that it 'makes a difference' when it is cut from a diet. The popular podcaster was speaking with comedian Jim Norton when he aired concerns about Americans often feel lethargic and unwell after eating bread, but Europeans can consume high qualities without issues. Norton said: 'Our bread is f***ed. Our bread is so f***ed. Go overseas to Italy and eat bread. You don't feel bad at all. Our s**t is poison.' Rogan agreed, adding: 'It won't matter if it's World War 3, but if it's not World War 3, probably stay away from bread.' He issued a caveat for sourdough bread specifically, telling his listeners to 'eat sourdough bread... [it] is great for you.' Rogan then referred to a video he'd seen on social media, sent to him by stand up comedian Brian Simpson. 'Simpson sent me this and he said ''I think I'm done with bread'' and I was like... oh my God this is kind of crazy.' In the video, a creator explains the differences between bread commonly served in America versus the rest of the world. 'What we call bread can't even be considered food in parts of Europe. See, here in America, it's not so much the gluten as what we've done to the grain,' the creator, later identified by Rogan as Dennis Echelbarger, said. 'About 200 years ago, we started stripping the bran and germ or the fiber in nutrients to make flour shelf stable, also nutritionally dead,' he said. 'Because the nutrients were gone, we enriched it with folic acid, which a large majority of the population can't even metabolize therefore many people experience fatigue, anxiety, hyperactivity and inflammation. But then the bread wasn't white enough, so they bleached it with chlorine gas. 'The bread didn't rise enough, so they added a carcinogen called potassium bromate, which is banned in several countries like Europe, the UK and even China. Then we wanted to ramp up production, so we started using glyphosate to dry out the wheat before harvest, causing endocrine disruption and damaging your gut. 'So now you're bloated, brain fogged, tired and blamed gluten. But gluten is just the scapegoat.' Instead, the video states 'the real issue is ultra processed, chemically altered, bleached, bromated, fake vitamin filled wheat soaked in glyphosate. This isn't bread.' Rogan said the video should be mandatory viewing 'for everybody to see.' 'I know when I cut that stuff out of my diet it makes a difference,' he said. 'Most of the bread you're getting in America is like that guy described and that's why you feel like s**t when you eat it.' Rogan's short video was inundated with Americans who had moved overseas and could vouch for his message. 'As someone who recently moved to Italy, I truly now have a better appreciation for bread than I ever did,' one wrote. 'Lived in Germany and the bread there is next level. Now I live Japan and the bread is also way better than the US but not better than EU,' another added.

NHS will use AI to prevent next Letby scandal
NHS will use AI to prevent next Letby scandal

Telegraph

time31 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

NHS will use AI to prevent next Letby scandal

The NHS will use artificial intelligence in an attempt to stop or prevent the next Lucy Letby scandal. Pioneering technology will scan health service data in real time and trigger rapid inspections when alarm bells ring over care. The early warning system will detect signs of serious failings including injuries, abuse, avoidable deaths and other incidents that could slip through the net. When concerns are raised, the watchdog, the Care Quality Commission (CQC), will deploy specialist inspection teams to investigate. Letby, 35, from Herefordshire, was convicted of murdering seven babies and attempting to kill seven others while working at the Countess of Chester Hospital in 2015 and 2016. A number of experts have since questioned the verdict. A Whitehall source said: 'It is an early warning system where there is no room for human error; once the trend is spotted, they will send in human teams to investigate. 'When we look back at cases like Letby, alarm bells should have been ringing about deaths at Countess of Chester long before they were. With other scandals like Shipman, the patterns were there. The question is always how did no one spot it?' Harold Shipman is considered to be one of the most prolific serial killers in modern history, with an estimated 250 victims. Under the scheme, which is being announced as part of a 10-Year Health Plan for the NHS, the UK will be the first country in the world to use machine learning to analyse a mass of healthcare data in an attempt to prevent tragedy. The rollout, which follows a spate of scandals in the health service, will start later this year in maternity wards. Wes Streeting has just announced a national investigation amid growing public concern over avoidable baby deaths. The Health Secretary said: 'While most treatments in the NHS are safe, even a single lapse that puts a patient at risk is one too many. Behind every safety breach is a person – a life altered, a family devastated, sometimes by heartbreaking loss.' Mr Streeting said patient safety and power would be at the heart of the 10-Year Health Plan, which will be launched later this week. He said: 'By embracing AI and introducing world-first early warning systems, we'll spot dangerous signs sooner and launch rapid inspections before harm occurs. 'This technology will save lives – catching unsafe care before it becomes a tragedy. It's a vital part of our commitment to move the NHS from analogue to digital, delivering better, safer care for everyone.' The new maternity outcomes signal system will launch across NHS trusts in November, analysing data almost in real time. It will flag higher-than-expected rates of stillbirth, neonatal death, and brain injury, prompting urgent local investigations. The approach aims to avoid a repeat of tragedies like those seen in Shrewsbury, Telford and East Kent, where failings went unchallenged for years, costing hundreds of avoidable deaths. Officials said the intervention to boost patient safety was on behalf of those who had endured unnecessary suffering at the hands of the NHS. However, the use of big data could trigger concerns from privacy campaigners who have objected to the role of Palantir, a US surveillance company, which will support the programme. The tech giant was founded by Peter Thiel, a US Republican party donor, and is best known for its work with intelligence and military agencies in the US. In the UK, it built the Covid dashboard, which saw data on vaccines, virus deaths and hospitalisations tracked daily during the pandemic and in 2023 won the contract for the NHS Federated Data Platform, which links patient records across services. All data used will be handled securely and in line with patient privacy rules, the Department of Health and Social Care said. Ministers say the AI warning tool will transform how safety issues are identified, helping to prevent crises before they escalate. The technology will look for unusual trends, such as sudden rises in harm, or differences in performance between similar services. Where concerns are raised, they will be investigated quickly, without waiting for complaints, whistleblowing or formal inspections to begin. Officials say this will help catch issues that are typically missed during routine inspections or reporting. The system will use information from the NHS Federated Data Platform, which links patient records across services, subjecting it to advanced AI analysis to spot trends. Ministers say the measure is a crucial part of shifting the NHS from an analogue to a fully digital system. This is one of three goals of the 10-Year Health Plan, alongside a shift from sickness to prevention and to deliver more care outside hospitals. Under the plan, supermarkets will be ordered to cut up to 100 calories from the average shopping basket in a new drive to tackle obesity. Prof Meghana Pandit, the NHS co-national medical director for secondary care, said: 'The move will turbo-charge the speed and efficiency with which we identify patient safety concerns and enable us to respond rapidly to improve patient care.' Sir Julian Hartley, CQC chief executive, said the watchdog would use data on 'inequalities in access, experience and outcomes to spot and act on risk earlier'. He said: 'We are already developing our new clearer, simpler, assessment approach, and in the future our experienced teams of inspectors, led by our newly appointed chief inspectors, will be able to conduct more inspections and share feedback on the findings more quickly – so that providers can make faster improvements, and the public have timely information about care.' However, Prof Nicola Ranger, the general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, said that reforms should focus on boosting the NHS workforce. 'The guaranteed way to improve care is to raise staffing levels,' she said. 'In the NHS today, one nurse can be left caring for 10, 15 or more patients at a time. The situation is drastically unsafe. 'By the time an inspection takes place, it could already be too late. Technology will always have a role to play, but having the right number of staff on the front line of care is the place to start the investment to make patients safe.'

Man criticises Home Office for keeping visa fee of wife who died before reaching UK
Man criticises Home Office for keeping visa fee of wife who died before reaching UK

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Man criticises Home Office for keeping visa fee of wife who died before reaching UK

A grieving husband has criticised the Home Office for holding on to thousands of pounds in visa fees he paid for his wife to come to the UK, despite the fact that she died before she was due to arrive in the country. Ubah Abdi Mohamed, 25, from Kenya, was granted a spouse visa to join her husband, Mohamed Jama, 47, a British citizen of Somali heritage who lives in north London. UK visa fees usually include an immigration health surcharge (IHS) to fund any NHS care the person applying for the visa might need while they are in the UK. As his wife's sponsor, Jama paid the visa application fee of £1,938, plus a £3,105 IHS. In March 2024, Ubah Abdi Mohamed was diagnosed with oesophageal cancer. Jama then travelled with her to India to get treatment, while their three-year-old daughter, Ikran, stayed in Kenya with her grandmother. 'Everything was going well,' Jama said. 'Ubah was smiling, she was putting on weight and the tumour was getting smaller. We were so happy when the Home Office granted the visa on 9 June.' But on 11 June, Ubah Abdi Mohamed died unexpectedly while still in India. Shortly afterwards, Jama instructed his lawyer to notify the Home Office of his wife's death and ask whether the £3,105 IHS could be refunded. The response from the Home Office was a pro forma letter, wrongly addressed to Ubah Abdi Mohamed, saying: 'We are very sorry to hear about the applicant.' It said that there were no exceptions to the rule that relatives cannot be refunded after paying the IHS, but if the addressee was 'unhappy with this policy' they could raise a complaint. Applicants whose visas are refused, or who withdraw their applications, are entitled to an IHS refund, but there is no repayment policy in the event of a death. 'My wife was a very special person. There are no words to express the love between myself and my wife,' Jama said. 'This policy of not refunding the money to pay for any NHS treatment when the person hasn't even entered the UK is very cruel. It's common sense that the money should be refunded because my wife hasn't used the NHS. Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion 'I'm speaking out because, even if the Home Office don't change their minds in my case, it might help others in this situation in the future.' Adam Spray, a senior associate solicitor at Wilsons, said: 'This sad set of circumstances regrettably highlights the Home Office's inflexible and all too often callous approach to real-world tragedies. 'It is frankly unconscionable that the Home Office refused to refund any of the fees paid to the grieving widower and father at such a difficult time. We hope the Home Office will take time to reflect … and reconsider.' In response, Home Office sources pointed to a longstanding policy that it does not comment on individual cases.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store