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Californians with Blue Shield health plans complain of sudden, erroneous cancellations

Blue Shield has acknowledged failures in enrollment and billing for some customers who purchased individual policies since 2014.
(Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
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Kaiser Health News

Ashley Summers said she got an unpleasant surprise in February when she tried to pick up a prescription for her rheumatoid arthritis: Her pharmacy said her insurance had been canceled, even though her premiums were paid.

Summers called Blue Shield of California and got her policy reinstated — then she said it happened again in March, and this time the lapse in coverage dragged on for three months.

Without insurance to cover her medications and doctor visits, her arthritis and fibromyalgia worsened until she could barely walk, she said. In June, she said, the state granted her permission to switch to another insurer.

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“This entire mess has been so incredibly stressful,” said Summers, 49, a personal assistant in Los Angeles who had paid $593 a month in premiums. “For Blue Shield just to pull the plug like this is infuriating.”

Around the state, consumers with individual Blue Shield policies, like Summers, say they have been subject to sudden, erroneous cancellations, especially in recent months, forcing them to go without heart medicine, skip vaccinations for their children and pay hundreds of dollars out of pocket for other medical care. On social media, customers have described frantic attempts to get their coverage reinstated.

Blue Shield has acknowledged failures in enrollment and billing for some customers who purchased individual policies since 2014, both inside and outside the Covered California exchange. The company declined to specify how many customers were affected. The problems don’t appear to involve people who have employer coverage or are enrolled in government health programs.

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In a June 22 lawsuit, the San Francisco insurer blamed many of these problems on an outside contractor it had hired in preparation for the launch of the Affordable Care Act in 2014. In a countersuit, the contractor, HealthPlan Services, denied the allegations and accused Blue Shield of sharing inaccurate customer data.

In a statement, Blue Shield said: “The roll-out of the Affordable Care Act was hard on the entire healthcare system. Our vendor failed to provide the support it promised and we spent millions of dollars to mitigate the impacts to our members.”

On Friday, Summers sued Blue Shield in Los Angeles County Superior Court, alleging breach of contract and seeking class-action status on behalf of other customers. The insurer couldn’t be reached for comment about the complaint.

Scott Glovsky, a Pasadena attorney representing Summers, said Blue Shield has known about these problems for years. “Blue Shield is taking people’s hard-earned dollars and then abandoning them when they’re sick,” he said.

Tina Hoover, 47, a horse trainer in Sherman Oaks, said Blue Shield canceled her policy twice in two months, even though she’d been paying her premiums faithfully for years.

Blue Shield denied more than $1,000 in doctor visits, saying she’d been terminated. After four calls, inconsistent responses, nonresponses and a pointed comment by her husband on Twitter, she got her insurance back, she said.

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“It was frightening that Blue Shield could be so disorganized on something so important like my healthcare,” said Hoover, who pays $858 a month in premiums and has been a policyholder with the insurer for 15 years.

All health insurers face complaints, about issues including annoying customer service and improper denials of care. But some experts say these persistent breakdowns in customer service at Blue Shield represent a black eye for California’s third-largest health insurer, which has 460,000 customers on the Covered California exchange and 3.8 million enrollees overall.

“I’ve never seen anything on this scale for such basic insurance operations,” said Paula Wade, an industry analyst at Decision Resources Group in Nashville. “Honest to goodness, if you can’t take people’s money and credit their account — that’s incredibly simple.”

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Across its plans last year, Blue Shield had the highest complaint rate per 10,000 enrollees among the eight largest health insurers statewide, according to the California Department of Managed Health Care. Blue Shield had 7.43 complaints per 10,000 enrollees, followed by Anthem Blue Cross (5.83), UnitedHealthcare (4.72) and Kaiser Permanente (4.6). (Kaiser Health News is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.)

For its individual market plans, Blue Shield chose to outsource signups, billing and payment processing to HealthPlan Services, a major contractor for insurers industrywide. In its breach-of-contract lawsuit against the contractor, Blue Shield said it needed outside help to handle the dramatic overhaul of the individual market in 2014 under the Affordable Care Act.

By June 2014, Blue Shield said it had formed a team of people “whose sole job was to address the failures in HPS’ services to ensure that Blue Shield’s customers’ interests were not impacted,” according to the lawsuit.

But the glitches persisted, and Blue Shield said in its lawsuit that it has lost tens of millions of dollars due to the contractor’s “egregious” failures on billing, refunds and related matters.

HealthPlan Services’ “data was ever-changing, inconsistent and flat-out incorrect,” Blue Shield said in the 15-page complaint in San Francisco federal court.

In a statement, HealthPlan Services called Blue Shield’s claims “baseless” and said it has a “successful track record of providing quality services to its clients and their members.”

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But in court papers, Blue Shield said the problems went beyond the sudden cancellations.

For instance, about 14,000 Blue Shield customers experienced “multiple attempted charges on their bank accounts” over one weekend, according to the insurance company’s lawsuit. About half the time, Blue Shield alleged, its contractor proposed refunds or credits that were excessive or had no basis at all. One time, a $27,000 refund went to the wrong customer, according to the lawsuit.

In April 2017, Blue Shield said, it initiated termination of the vendor’s contract.

In an Aug. 13 counterclaim, HealthPlan Services said, “Blue Shield’s highly unusual data maintenance and transmission methods and business processes resulted in customer-facing errors that were directly attributable to Blue Shield’s conduct.”

Blue Shield disagreed, saying in a statement that HealthPlan Services’ “allegations are unfounded and we look forward to responding to them in the legal proceedings.”

Meanwhile, San Francisco resident Burcu Sivrikaya, 32, said she found out late last month that Blue Shield had canceled her coverage — effective May 1. She spent hours on the phone talking to seven different company representatives, trying to get her policy reinstated, only to be told it would take 30 days, she said. “Are they using pen and paper? Why does it take 30 days? It’s insane.”

Now Sivrikaya, a social media manager, is trying to get Blue Shield to refund the $1,179 she said she paid in premiums for the three months the company withdrew coverage.

The Department of Managed Health Care fined Blue Shield and a subsidiary a combined $557,500 last year for improper cancellations and a variety of customer grievance violations. Blue Shield is contesting some of those allegations and penalties, according to the state.

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Blue Shield noted that it performed well on certain categories in the state data, such as an extremely low complaint rate among medical providers.

The company also said its customer satisfaction score improved in a recent consumer survey by Forrester Research, rising nearly 2 percentage points to 63.6 out of 100. Forrester still labeled Blue Shield’s performance as “poor,” putting it in ninth place out of 17 health insurers rated this year.

Terhune is a senior correspondent for Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent publication of the Kaiser Family Foundation.

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