L.A. County health plan fined $55M for healthcare failures

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L.A. Care, the nation’s largest publicly operated health plan, was fined $55 million for failing to authorize care thousands of poor and at-risk members, causing health-threatening treatment delays, California regulators announced Friday.

The fines — by far the largest in state history — were levied against the Los Angeles County health plan by the state Department of Managed Health Care and the Department of Health Care Services.

“The scope and breadth of its violations indicate deep-rooted, systemic failures that threaten the health and safety of its members,” said Michelle Baass, director of the California Department of Health Care Services.

In one case, a cancer patient was left without treatment despite deteriorating health, another plan member suffered “extreme pain” for over two weeks and another cancer patient who was given only six to nine months to live left the plan for another insurer because of delays, the agencies said.

“My hope is that this sends a strong message to the entire industry that the state takes very seriously protecting all consumers, but particularly our most vulnerable enrollees,” said Mary Watanabe, director of the Department of Managed Health Care.

L.A. Care, also known as the Local Initiative Health Authority for Los Angeles County, has about 2.5 million members, making it the largest Medicaid plan in the state. Many of its members are low-income and rely on county hospitals, although some have access to private doctors.

The state regulatory agencies said their investigations were prompted by an article published two years ago in the Los Angeles Times, which noted that patients seeking specialty care with a referral from their primary doctor had to wait months for approval instead of the required 15-day limit for the health plan to offer appointments.

Some patients died in the meantime, the Times reported, including a 61-year-old woman with chronic kidney disease who waited 10 months to see specialists.

The health plan disclosed last year that it had a backlog of thousands of requests for authorizing healthcare services, and that it had found nearly 93,000 cases in which it had failed to process such requests in a timely manner.

The health plan also said it had failed to issue resolution letters in the time required for tens of thousands of grievances filed by members from 2019 through October 2021.

In a statement, L.A. Care said it had identified and self-reported the problems and had taken corrective actions, including agreeing to pay for an independent but state-approved monitor to make sure it meets state standards as quickly as possible.

The backlog of grievances will be resolved this month, L.A. Care said.

L.A. Care also said it will contest the fines, calling them “arbitrary and unnecessarily punitive.”

“What the state does not seem to factor into their equation is that a financial penalty of this magnitude creates yet another financial hurdle for a public health plan that is a crucial part of the healthcare safety net in Los Angeles County,” the statement said.

The fines were applauded by Health Access California, a consumer advocacy group.

“L.A. Care failed its patients in handling grievances, authorizing treatments, and ensuring timely access to care. Californians died as a result,” said Diana Douglas, the group’s policy and legislative advocacy manager. “These fines are not just merited but modest given the systemic issues and scale of the harm for tens of thousands of consumers.”

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