• 'Ghost networks' are harming patients, but attempts to eliminate them h

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jun 6 08:11:56 2025
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    The clock started ticking when Michelle Mazzola�s son, Guy, was diagnosed
    with autism before his second birthday. Doctors told her the sooner Guy received therapy for his nonverbal communication and behavioral
    challenges, the better chance he had of reaching his full potential � and perhaps entering a kindergarten with neurotypical students.

    Like many parents, Mazzola hoped to find therapists who were covered by
    their insurance. So she consulted a directory of providers listed as �in- network� on her insurance company�s website.

    Mazzola spent two weeks calling providers on the list, but found no viable options.

    �Probably 50% of the time no one answered the phone or the phone number
    was wrong,� she said. �Then you would get people on the phone and they�d
    say, �Yeah, we have about a nine-month wait list.��

    She had stumbled upon what�s informally known as a �ghost network� � a directory of providers that are largely unreachable, out of network or
    don�t accept new patients. Studies suggest it�s common to encounter these networks while looking for covered care.

    By prolonging the search for a provider, ghost networks can delay
    patients� ability to get diagnosed and treated, or cause them to forgo
    care altogether. But regulatory efforts to force insurance companies to
    update their directories or penalize them for inaccurate provider
    information have fallen short, prompting some patients to turn to the
    courts.

    A class action lawsuit filed last year on behalf of federal employees in
    New York against Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield claims the company�s
    ghost networks amount to deceptive advertising by making people think
    they�re purchasing insurance with an extensive list of in-network
    providers.

    The suit further claims that inaccurate directories help insurance
    companies �evade the costs� of covering people�s care. It alleges that plaintiffs who could not rely on Anthem�s directory were forced to use out-of-network doctors, saddling them with thousands of dollars in extra
    costs. In moving to dismiss the case, Anthem has argued that federal law pre-empts the plaintiffs from suing as members of the Federal Employees
    Health Benefits Program.

    Mazzola, who lives in Connecticut and runs a construction company with her husband, is not a plaintiff in the suit. She estimated that she pays about $7,000 out of pocket each month for Guy�s care, even after appealing
    denied claims and getting reimbursed for some out-of-network costs. She believes she wouldn�t have to pay that sum if the providers in Anthem�s directory were available.

    �You take it at face value when you�re buying a plan that this is what I�m getting,� Mazzola said. �I would have gladly gone to any of those [in-
    network] providers if they actually were taking patients.�

    If you are dealing with bills that seem to be out of line or a denial of coverage, care or repairs, whether for health, home or auto, please email
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    A spokesperson for Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield said the company
    meets access requirements outlined under state law.

    �We also work hard to ensure that our provider directories are up-to-date
    and as accurate as possible, which requires a shared commitment from
    providers to update their information when there are any changes,� the spokesperson said.

    Anthem said its provider network offers most of the services Guy needs,
    but due to the specialized nature of those services, it can be challenging
    to get appointments immediately. The company said it reviewed the list of providers that Mazzola tried to contact and found five errors related to incorrect phone numbers or addresses, which it said it will work with
    providers to fix.

    NBC News reached out to 21 providers listed in Anthem�s network, and found
    20 either didn�t take patients Guy�s age or had no availability for
    months.

    Another class action lawsuit filed in April on behalf of state and local employees in New York against Carelon Behavioral Health, which provides
    health care services through insurance plans, claims that ghost networks delayed plaintiffs� access to mental health treatment. Carelon said it
    does not comment on pending litigation.

    The two class action suits are among the first to challenge insurance
    companies over ghost networks, said Steve Cohen, a lawyer at Pollock Cohen
    in New York who is representing the plaintiffs in both cases as well as Mazzola.

    �Patients are in need of help,� Cohen said. �They call provider after
    provider who are listed in this directory to get no answer, to be told
    it�s not a doctor�s office, to be told they don�t accept the insurance.
    It�s incredibly frustrating and often complicates getting medical care.
    It�s dangerous.�

    A widespread problem
    Mazzola�s experience is familiar to many, regardless of their insurance
    plan or health issue.

    �The vast majority of the time, a doctor�s information is not going to be correct,� said Dr. Neel Butala, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine who co-founded a company that
    uses artificial intelligence to help large health plans improve provider
    data.

    Butala reviewed physician directories from five large health insurers and
    found that 81% of entries had inconsistencies, such as address errors or
    the wrong specialty�s being listed for a physician. His findings were
    published in JAMA Network Open. A government review of Medicare Advantage
    plans found that the share of inaccurately listed provider locations
    ranged from nearly 5% to 93%, depending on the directory.

    Ghost networks can pose a particular challenge to finding mental health providers, many of whom have long patient waitlists or have stopped taking insurance. After having called nearly 400 listed numbers for mental health providers in New York, the state attorney general�s office found that 86%
    were ghost entries. Staffers on the Senate Finance Committee similarly contacted 120 mental health providers listed as in-network by Medicare Advantage plans and found that ghost entries made up more than 80%.

    �In my view, it�s a breach of contract for insurance companies to sell
    their plan for thousands of dollars each month while their product is
    unusable, unusable due to a ghost network,� Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said
    at a Senate hearing on mental health access in 2023.

    Anneliese Hanson, who was a network market manager at Cigna Behavioral
    Health until several years ago, said she felt pressure to make provider networks seem more robust to appeal to current or prospective members.

    �If our target was to have 100 autism specialists within a certain
    [geographic area], we would be working towards meeting that target on
    paper, rather than actually checking and ensuring that there were 100
    autism providers,� Hanson said.

    A Cigna spokesperson said that it takes rigorous measures to ensure its directory is updated and accurate and that it has a dedicated team of specialists to help patients access behavioral care quickly and
    conveniently.

    In response to Hanson�s comments, the spokesperson said: �These untrue and inflammatory assertions have no basis in reality, neither back then nor
    today.�

    Cohen said federal and state standards require insurance companies to
    offer an ample number of in-network health care providers within a defined distance of a patient�s home. Those requirements may encourage insurers to
    pad their directories, he said.

    But Butala pushed back on that idea: �I don�t think there�s any actually
    bad actors,� he said. �I think everyone wants to get this right.�

    Butala said there�s an incentive for insurance companies to put out the
    right information, since a bad member experience could cause them to lose customers.

    One explanation for ghost networks, he said, is that providers report
    doctors� information in a way that�s conducive for billing, but isn�t necessarily accessible to patients. Insurers often receive data that�s difficult and time-intensive to comb through, he said.

    �I think it�s just a really hard problem to solve,� he said.

    A better solution?
    Mazzola said she and her husband, also named Guy, have been fortunate
    enough to afford their son�s autism therapy so far. The younger Guy, now
    2, is not speaking yet but has gotten better at making eye contact and
    using sign language to communicate words.

    But the Mazzolas still feel the insurance system didn�t work for them as promised.

    �You pay for insurance your whole life, hoping [a diagnosis] never
    happens, but when it does, that you can put your head on the pillow at
    night knowing they�re going to be there for you. And that just wasn�t the case,� Guy Mazzola said.

    Legal and medical experts say some protections against ghost networks
    exist but aren�t consistently enforced. Under the No Surprises Act, a
    federal law that took effect in January 2022, private health plans are
    required to verify and update their provider directories at least every 90 days. If members receive out-of-network care because the directory
    information was inaccurate, insurance companies must reimburse them for
    any costs that exceed the in-network price.

    Patients can also file complaints to state regulators, who have the
    authority to fine companies for directory errors. But a ProPublica investigation last year determined that such fines are rare. In an average year, insurance regulators issue fewer than a dozen fines for directory
    errors, the investigation found � and even then, the penalties are small.

    One solution that might reduce the prevalence of ghost networks is a centralized directory of providers that all health plans could refer to.
    But health policy experts see that as a long-term goal that would be
    difficult to implement.

    Butala said AI can help insurers scrub their directories for errors.

    �I don�t think health plans are skimping on throwing people at the
    problem,� he said. �I think they�ve been throwing too many people at the problem, and now they realize maybe AI can actually make it better.�

    But the Mazzolas also think insurance companies should be willing to pay
    more providers, so it�s not a challenge to offer services in-network.

    �I�m not anti-business. I�m not anti-profit, but there�s an ethical side
    of it, too,� Michelle Mazzola said. �Something needs to be done.�

    https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-care/ghost-networks-health- insurance-companies-therapy-rcna210591

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