The Physician Was Guilty of Trying to Get Reimbursement for
His Patients
The corrupt,
mismanaged, inefficient, outdated (fill in your adjective here ________) U. S. health care industry got a nicet lesson
when a jury in California
awarded
a physician $3.8 million in damages when an insurance company tried to
exclude him from their preferred physician group. The problem, according to the doctor and
validated by a jury was this.
The jury ruled late Monday in favor of
Jeffrey Nordella, 58, an urgent-care and family-practice doctor who alleged
that Anthem barred him from its network in 2010, when he applied to be a
preferred provider. The
damages could climb higher Friday, when the 12-person panel reconvenes and
considers punitive damages against Anthem, a unit of insurance giant WellPoint
Inc.
The jury
found that Anthem, the state's largest for-profit health insurer, violated
Nordella's right to "fair procedure," and the company did so with
"malice, oppression or fraud." That latter finding prompted the
hearing Friday in Los Angeles County Superior Court to determine punitive
damages.
Now juries are notorious for siding with doctors, so
this case will go to appeal and the insurance company may yet prevail. But here is one of the smoking guns in the
trial.
The company rejected Nordella's application for its PPO network
because he wasn't board certified in family medicine and because Anthem already
had a sufficient number of primary-care physicians, Ng said. At the time,
Nordella was medical director at Porter Ranch Quality Care, a walk-in clinic
that offers urgent care and family medicine.
Theresa Barta, a Newport Beach attorney who represents Nordella,
said the insurance company contended it had 137 primary-care physicians in its
network within 10 miles of Porter Ranch. At trial, Anthem could name only seven
of those doctors, Barta said.
Gee, seven instead of 137. Well the company had an excuse.
Because of frequent changes in its list of physicians since 2010,
Anthem said, it could not retrieve all of the requested information.
but of course there is another explanation as to why the
company could not name the 137 doctors.
They didn’t exist.
Oh, that.
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