Patients and Physicians Speak Out
Prior authorization burdens negatively impact patients and health care professionals around the country every day. Explore their stories and share your own experiences to make your voice heard on the need to #FixPriorAuth.
Featured Stories
Yes, just last year I needed knee surgery. The insurance made me go through 2 weeks of resting it then 3 weeks of physical therapy plus a fluid removal attempt. All this before I could even get an MRI that my ortho doc with 40 yrs experience knew I needed in the first place. After the MRI I had to wait 2 more weeks for approval. From start to finish I was laid up 4 months and even lost my job because I ran out of FMLA. Now I have a wrist injury and I am not going for treatment because I really like my new job and I am afraid to go through it all again.
I went almost two weeks without long-acting insulin and two days without even short-acting insulin waiting for prior authorizations. This landed me in the ER 3 times and sent me into a pancreatitis flare. And wasted about 3 hours of my doctor’s time to get insulin. This was not new either; I have been diabetic since I was a kid, so about 25 years. They also made me switch what kind I use, and that caused my sugar to be out of control for weeks, even after I finally got the insulin, while I determined my correct bolus dose of the new insulin.
Share Your Story
Have you ever gone to the pharmacy to fill a prescription only to be told that your insurance company requires approval before they'll cover your treatment?
Have you ever waited days, weeks or months for a test or medical procedure to be scheduled because you needed authorization from an insurer?
Are you a physician frustrated with the administrative headaches and their impact on your patients?
Have prior authorization delays caused you to take more sick days, be less productive at work or miss out on day-to-day life?
Share how prior authorization has impacted you, your loved ones or your patients to draw attention to the need for decision-makers to address this issue. Your voice can make an impact.
All Stories
Use the buttons below to explore how prior authorization impacts both health care professionals and patients throughout the country.
I work at a urology practice. When I started here the only procedures requiring prior authorizations were surgeries. Now medications, radiology, and in-office procedures require prior authorization or you do not get paid. Often new prior authorization requirements are buried deep within some emailed network bulletin. Insurers are famous for changing prior authorization requirements. They just started requiring us to request prior authorizations on all chemo medications injected or infused through a portal. The questions are often confusing and time consuming even to the physicians. We have had patients that have had to put off certain treatments because it takes so long to get a prior authorization back or the hoops we have to jump through are increasingly tedious.
PA affects me absolutely f***inglutely. I'm an internist in a rural north GA town. It absolutely INFURIATES ME when I have to call someone who doesn't know the difference between a jaw and sinuses yet has the power to deny a patient a study or treatment. They are so completely unaware of anything medical and I had to go through at least 10 years of training before I could touch a patient.