Delays, Denials & Deceptions
The truth about LTD insurance
By Annie Bloom
Reprinted by permission from The CFIDS Chronicle.
© copyright 1996 The CFIDS Association of America
http://www.cfids-me.org/disinissues/ins1.html
Few illnesses are as prolonged and as disabling as chronic
fatigue and immune dysfunction syndrome (CFIDS). Our unique
complex of symptoms can cripple us physically, mentally and
emotionally, draining not only our energies, but our financial
resources as well. No current treatment is totally effective
against this devastating affliction, and a cure may be far off
on the horizon. If there has ever been a need for insurance to
replace income lost to prolonged disability, we should surely be
its beneficiaries. Yet despite our best efforts to provide
convincing medical evidence, it appears that a disproportionate
number of our claims for long-term disability (LTD) benefits are
denied.
Trouble in the Mailbox
A chill ripples through me when I hear the mail drop through the
slot onto the floor. The sound of the brass flap slamming shut
against the metal jamb brings me reluctantly to my feet, and I'm
slightly breathless as I pick up the pile of letters. Although I
am waiting for my LTD claim to be approved for CFIDS, I'm
relieved when none of the envelopes bear the etched lighthouse
logo of my former employer's insurance carrier. After three
years of delays, denials and distortions, I've learned to expect
trouble. This mailbox scenario is repeated daily in homes and
apartments throughout America. More than a hundred claimants
I've encountered in support groups, on-line forums and Internet
mail groups, all disabled by CFIDS and the closely related
conditions of fibromyalgia (FM) and multiple chemical
sensitivities (MCS), have shared their stories of anger,
frustration and disappointment with me. All expected to begin
receiving benefits soon after filing claims supported by
physicians' assertions that they suffered from a disabling
physical illness and were too ill to work.
After struggling through elimination periods of three to six
months before becoming eligible for long-term disability
benefits, almost all of these very sick and financially
challenged patients have been forced to wage prolonged and
costly legal battles with insurance companies which have broken
their promise to provide financial security in the unlikely
event of a life-challenging, career-shattering illness. Although
many insurance companies are involved, these claimants'
experiences are strikingly similar.
An informal survey of more than 100 persons with CFIDS (PWCs)
struggling with their LTD carriers was taken by the author of
this article. Most were repeatedly delayed another four to six
months, with some waiting a year or longer for payments to
begin. Others received no benefits at all. Insurers insisted 53%
of the claimants were "mentally ill," limiting their benefits to
24 months; 25% were told they had "no objective evidence of
disability" and paid nothing; 10% were persuaded to accept small
settlements in exchange for dropping their claims. Only 12% of
those who applied are currently receiving benefits for physical
illnesses, yet even these fortunate claimants report being
subjected to repeated medical evaluations, surveillance,
harassment and the abiding fear of being cut off.
Claimants who succeed in the battle for benefits tend to be
savvy, articulate and persistent individuals with the resources
to obtain sophisticated medical evidence and aggressive
attorneys. Poorer, older, less-educated and extremely ill
claimants seldom fare as well. The sickest and least privileged
among us may be easily brought down by insurance company
employees who find them fair game for harassment, deception and
intimidation. Their stories are the most disturbing I have
encountered.
Your Condition is Subject to a Two-Year Limit
Most LTD policies contain a two-year limitation for benefits
paid due to mental or nervous conditions, and insurance company
employees have learned how to steer our claims into this
category. More than half of those who claim benefits for CFIDS,
FMS or MCS are labeled mentally ill, often by an on-site
physician who has never seen the claimant and whose identity and
qualifications are unknown. If the claimant's long list of CFIDS
symptoms includes depression, anxiety or panic attacks, these
symptoms will be magnified, while pages of medical evidence
supporting the claimant's physical disability may be ignored. If
the claimant is being treated by a psychotherapist or uses
antidepressants for symptomatic relief, the insurer may insist
that the claimant's primary condition is psychological. The
highly restrictive criteria developed to screen patients for
research purposes are widely misused by insurers who insist that
the presence of any past or current psychiatric diagnosis
precludes a finding of CFIDS.
A CFIDS patient wrote: "Not only did my insurer insist that my
symptoms were due to major depression, but they also demanded
that I be under the care and treatment of a psychologist or
psychiatrist, and that I provide a letter certifying disability
from one of these doctors before they would pay any benefits." A
healthcare worker, still hoping to return to work, was deeply
distressed about the insurance company's diagnosis, and agreed
to anything her claims representative demanded in exchange for
assurance that her employer would never be told she had been
classified as mentally ill. Patients and their physicians have
even been promised faster approval of claims if they apply for
benefits on the basis of depression instead of CFIDS. In
September 1995, an insurance company field representative sat in
a claimant's living room and stated, "From the beginning, we
have considered CFS a mental and nervous disorder, therefore
limiting payment to two years."
Accidental disclosure of confidential information is often used
to intimidate employees applying for medical and disability
benefits. Despite assurances that medical information will not
be shared with employers, letters from disability insurers to
claimants discussing their alleged psychiatric conditions are
sometimes copied to employers, violating claimants' rights to
privacy. The American Psychiatric Society has documented many
instances of employee medical and psychiatric information being
placed in the hands of employers or coworkers with embarrassing
and even tragic results. In the book Privacy in America, David
Linowes reports that some insurance companies prefer to have
claims processed through employers' personnel departments as a
way to pressure employees not to use their insurance.[1]
Your Symptoms are All Subjective
Those we interviewed who managed to escape the mental illness
classification may be denied because the insurer insists that
their subjective symptoms do not provide objective evidence of
disability. While there is no single method of denial applied to
all claimants, and new excuses to deny claims have developed
over time, the policy of magnifying minor evidence to limit or
deny claims has been consistent. One claimant was denied for not
providing evidence of a sore throat, while others who documented
this symptom were also denied. Another claimant was told that he
must provide objective lab testing to support his CFIDS
diagnosis. When he inquired what tests he needed to prove his
claim, he was told that the company knew of none.
Sometimes the reasons for denials are trivial and appear to
ignore all medical evidence. One claimant's benefits were
terminated immediately after a claims worker arrived at her home
without an appointment and reported, "she did not look tired and
had no dark circles under her eyes"; another was told she was
"just tired and needed a vacation". A woman at the peak of her
career was accused of applying for disability because her
husband had retired; another professional woman whose symptoms
had gradually worsened over the years was denied because the
insurer learned her position was going to be eliminated. A
fibromyalgia patient lost his benefits after a surveillance team
videotaped him working in his garden, an activity suggested by
his doctor.
Independent medical examinations (IMEs) are frequently scheduled
by insurers to rebut medical evidence provided by claimants'
physicians. Examiners selected by the insurers are often biased
against or ignorant of CFIDS. Several claimants report that the
examiner admitted knowing nothing about CFIDS or told them that
"CFIDS was not a valid diagnosis". A woman with such severe
symptoms that she could stand for only a few minutes was
pronounced capable of returning to work after a physical
medicine specialist took measurements of her arms and legs. A
patient with MCS was required to attend several examinations in
an office which had just been remodeled and repainted. Yet
another claimant learned her examiner had publicly stated that "CFIDS
and MCS are both depression." When she asked for another
examiner, she was told he had been selected randomly from a list
of qualified physicians by an independent contractor. A call to
the independent contractor revealed that the insurer had asked
specifically for this examiner and no other.
Social Insecurity
Most LTD contracts require beneficiaries to apply for Social
Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) because SSDI benefits are
deducted from the amount the LTD insurer must pay. Although
perfectly legal and considered by the insurers to be smart
business practices, many of the circumstances related to
enforcement of this and similar clauses are suspect.
A middle-aged woman who was still capable of working part time
was pressured by her LTD insurance company to apply for Social
Security. When Social Security told her she had to leave her job
to become eligible, she reluctantly gave up her career. Then the
insurance company claimed she was "depressed" and allowed her
only two years' disability for her "mental disorder." Another
claimant was threatened with loss of her LTD benefits if she did
not obtain Social Security Disability. When she was too ill to
appeal a denial from Social Security, her LTD benefits were
immediately terminated.
After learning that their SSDI benefits had been approved,
several claimants reported that their LTD insurers sent them
letters demanding immediate repayment of several thousands of
dollars in LTD benefits, yet offered to cancel these debts if
the insureds would agree to drop their LTD claims, giving up all
rights to future benefits.
Some tactics used to investigate LTD claims violate rights to
privacy guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. One company sends
claimants a routine supplemental information form; just above
the signature line, in much smaller print, is a blanket release
authorizing access by anyone designated by the insurer to all of
the claimant's records, including medical treatment and history;
psychiatric records; drug and alcohol use; financial, credit and
employment records; and any other data or records regarding the
claimant's activities. Claimants have complained after being
followed and videotaped for several days at a time. Although it
is illegal for insurers to order surveillance of persons to whom
they are not paying benefits, one woman reported that her fiancé
was not only surveilled, but received a background check as
well. A family reported video surveillance so intrusive that it
violated their marital privacy and caused their young children
to become anxious and distressed.
Harassment of Physicians
Not even the physicians who treat us are exempt from harassment.
On the chance that they might produce evidence which could be
used to limit or deny claims, many physicians are required to
submit their office notes and provide detailed reports at
frequent intervals. When physicians are unable to keep up with
these demands, their patients have been threatened with loss of
benefits. One of the nation's leading CFIDS experts, was
required to explain the process by which he diagnosed CFIDS. The
claims representative, who used the terms "chronic fatigue" and
"chronic fatigue syndrome" interchangeably, declared his report
"inconclusive as to a diagnosis of chronic fatigue." Insurers
have also deliberately distorted and taken out of context
physicians' statements in order to deny benefits to their
claimants. Physicians who wrote to insurers protesting that
their words had been twisted to mean the opposite of what was
intended were simply ignored.
An Unreasonable Standard of Proof
Insurers apply a double standard to the evidence used in
evaluating our claims. They insist that patients with CFIDS,
fibromyalgia and MCS provide irrefutable objective evidence of
their disabilities, yet reports from the insurers' own medical
departments are not subjected to the rigorous scrutiny which
reports from claimants' physicians must endure. The
qualifications, medical experience and specialities of the
insurers' anonymous "in-house" physicians are unknown, and the
outside physicians paid by insurers to perform independent
medical examinations are often grossly unsuited to diagnose
patients with these complex, poorly understood conditions. After
waiting several months for a decision, a denied claimant may
simply be told that "a preponderance of medical evidence points
to a psychological illness, although this preponderance is never
produced. Similarly, claimants who asked for ERISA reviews (see
below) from one insurer received identical, boiler-plate letters
asserting that "our decision still stands." Those who asked what
was needed to perfect their claims were never given this
important information.
Insurers Protected by Federal Laws
The multi-billion dollar insurance industry is protected by a
1987 U.S. Supreme Court decision that greatly restricts the
relief available to claimants in cases where disability
insurance is provided by an employer. Employee benefits,
including group LTD insurance, fall under the jurisdiction of an
arcane federal law called the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974, or ERISA (see "ERISA Protects Insurers" on
page 33). Under the current reading of ERISA laws, claimants may
sue to recover benefits in federal courts, but are precluded
from filing charges of bad faith against insurance companies in
state courts. Compensation for emotional distress or punitive
damages is not allowed under a narrow interpretation of the
definition of benefits. Thus, there is little incentive for
insurers to resolve claims promptly or fairly, and attorneys are
often reluctant to bring these cases to trial because court
costs can approach or exceed potential recovery. Hiding behind a
law originally intended to protect employee pensions, LTD
insurers can delay, deny and distort our claims for years with
almost total impunity.
In contrast, claimants with individual LTD policies have less
difficulty with their claims because they can sue insurers for
bad faith and receive compensation for emotional distress and
punitive damages under state laws governing their policies. An
examination of the approval rate for individual LTD claims and
the standard of proof required for success may reveal
substantially more ethical -- and favorable -- handling of CFIDS,
fibromyalgia and MCS claims.
There are also powerful incentives for insurance company
employees to deny claims: profitable companies pay substantial
bonuses to employees who help them realize healthy profits. In
February 1996, UNUM, the nation's largest disability insurer
paid $18 million in bonuses to employees who contributed to the
company's greatly improved performance in 1995.[2] And there is
little doubt that ambitious claims managers can advance their
careers by saving the company's money the best way they know
how: by denying or closing claims.
New Limits May Restrict Benefits
Until very recently, insurers have had to label claimants
"mentally ill" to limit payouts to two years. As of this writing
UNUM has received permission in 44 states to write new policies
which limit benefits to two years for "self-reported symptoms,
or illnesses where tests fail to identify an underlying cause";
applications are pending in the six remaining states. UNUM has
also begun offering employers a discounted LTD policy which caps
benefits as 12 months for self-reported illnesses. While UNUM
doesn't specify particular illnesses that would receive limited
benefits, the restrictions would apply in some cases of back and
muscle pain, fatigue, headaches and other complaints if medical
tests fail to show an underlying cause.
Other companies are following UNUM's lead. Standard Insurance
Co. has drafted new policies limiting lifetime benefits to two
years for "chronic fatigue conditions" or "allergies or
sensitivities to chemicals or the environment." Fortis lists
specific conditions, such as chronic fatigue, that are subject
to new limits. MetDisAbility plans to introduce a two-year limit
for chronic fatigue syndrome within the next few months, and
Cigna is developing contract language that would cap benefits
for "self-diagnosed" illnesses at one or two years. UNUM "will
decide on the basis of circumstances in individual cases."[3]
The legality of the two-year mental illness limitation is
currently being challenged under the Americans with Disabilities
Act (ADA). Several cases are pending in federal courts, and the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has asserted that
it is improper to differentiate between mental and physical
illness in LTD policies. It should be noted that the protections
for disabled persons available under the ADA also apply to
persons who are perceived as having a disability, for example,
being labeled by an insurer as "mentally ill." In this period of
insurance industry consolidations,* joining coalitions with
other disability rights organizations may help us fight all
two-year limitations and other abuses by the powerful insurance
industry.
In 1994, Dr. Michael Kita, medical advisor to UNUM, stated:
"There has been a view that (chronic fatigue syndrome) is some
form of mass hysteria or overdiagnosis by doctors or depression.
It doesn't look that simple anymore. There does appear to be
something real happening."[5] Unfortunately, the "something real
happening" is that LTD claims are still being denied, even for
claimants who meet CDC criteria and have satisfied stringent
SSDI guidelines for total disability on the basis of CFIDS.
While it is impossible to blame this situation on a single
insurer, the largest, most aggressive companies are making it
increasingly difficult for smaller companies to honor claims and
still remain competitive with the industry giants. And as more
companies are swallowed up through mergers and acquisitions,
CFIDS claimants who have been receiving benefits for years are
being put on notice that their payments may soon be terminated.
References
1. Linowes, David, Privacy in America. University of Illinois
Press, 1989. Page 122.
2. Strosnider, Kim: UNUM workers share bonus. Portland Press
Herald, Feb. 10, 1996.
3. Jeffrey, Nancy Ann: Insurers curb some benefits for
disability. Wall St. Journal, July 25, 1996.
4. Strosnider, Kim: UNUM will survive, thrive. Portland Press
Herald, Feb. 10, 1996.
5. Johnson, Hillary: Osler's Web. New York: Crown Publishers,
Inc., 1996;655.
Annie Bloom (a pseudonym) has been afflicted with CFIDS, FM and
MCS since 1990.
If you believe you have been treated unfairly by your LTD
insurer: 1. Write to your state insurance commissioner,
providing as much objective evidence of unfair treatment as
possible. Let the insurance commissioner know that people with
your illness are often treated unfairly by LTD insurance
companies and that your case is only one of many unjustly denied
benefits. You can find toll-free numbers for most state
insurance commissioners by calling directory assistance.
1. Document the following strategies used to delay and deny
claims:
· Repeated and unreasonable delays in processing your claim,
including "lost" information;
· Ignoring your doctor's diagnosis of a physical illness
recognized by the CDC and defined by a specific set of symptoms;
· Classifying your illness as "mental/nervous" despite reports
from well-qualified physicians attesting to the contrary;
· Insisting you have no objective evidence that you are disabled
and unable to work, despite your physician's insistence that
forcing you to return to work would exacerbate your illness;
· Basing your denial on an obviously biased or unqualified
"independent medical examination" or the opinion of an
"in-house" insurance company doctor who has never seen you.
2. Send copies of ERISA complaints to your representatives in
Congress, asking them to take action against unfair treatment of
disabled persons by insurance companies who have found
protection in these laws. If your policy is governed by state
law, write to your representatives in state government.
3. Support the efforts of local, national and on-line CFIDS
organizations to secure more just treatment for CFIDS, MCS and
FM patients by the insurance industry.
The CFIDS Association of America
Advocacy, Information, Research and Encouragement for the CFIDS
Community
PO Box 220398, Charlotte NC 28222-0398
800/442-3437 - fax: 704/365-9755 - Resource Line: 704/365-2343
Website: http://www.cfids.org
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