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Medicine AI

Tech Worker Builds Free AI-Powered Tool For Fighting US Health Insurance Denials (sfstandard.com) 52

The online news site San Francisco Standard profiles an open-source platform "that takes advantage of large language models to help users generate health insurance appeals with AI...

"A Fight Health Insurance user can scan their insurance denial, and the system will craft several appeal letters to choose from and modify." With the slogan "Make your health insurance company cry too," [San Francisco tech worker Holden Karau's site] makes filing appeals faster and easier. A recent study found that Affordable Care Act patients appeal only about 0.1% of rejected claims, and she hopes her platform will encourage more people to fight back...

The "dirty secret" of the insurance industry is that most denials can be successfully appealed, according to Dr. Harley Schultz, a patient advocate in the Bay Area. "Very few people know about the process, and even fewer take advantage of it, because it's rather cumbersome, arcane, and confusing, by design," he said. "But if you fight hard enough and long enough, most denials get overturned...."

While some doctors have turned to artificial intelligence themselves to fight claims, Karau's service puts the power in the hands of patients, who likely have more time and motivation to dedicate to their claims. "In an ideal world, we would have a different system, but we don't live in an ideal world, so what I'm shooting for here is incremental progress and making the world suck a little less," she said.

Karau estimates she's spent about $10,000 building the platform, according to the article, which adds that "it's free for users, though she might eventually charge for added services like faxing appeals."

Thanks to Slashdot reader mirro_dude for sharing the news.
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Tech Worker Builds Free AI-Powered Tool For Fighting US Health Insurance Denials

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  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Saturday August 31, 2024 @04:37PM (#64751920)

    Need single payer or more rules about what must be covered.
    Also need an rule saying the parent is not at fault for any billing or coding errors.

    • We already know that's an obvious fix for this (I agree we should have it). But that's been a non-starter for a while. What else might help that isn't quite that scary?

      What about publishing more data? And making that data easy to compare and talk about? Today I can't tell you if a particular company is better or worse than any other. How can we have a free market without knowing who we're dealing with and what they've done before?

      Or forcing standardized pricing. Today I don't know how much I'm going t

  • by ukoda ( 537183 ) on Saturday August 31, 2024 @04:49PM (#64751932) Homepage
    "In an ideal world, we would have a different system". How about this world and pretty much any country that is not the USA?
  • Awesome! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Saturday August 31, 2024 @05:00PM (#64751970)

    Leveling the playing field in healthcare insurance would likely do wonders to make single payer more politically palpable. Money needs to be taken out of the insurance companies and the end users are more likely to be able to provide the necessary leverage.

  • by Mirnotoriety ( 10462951 ) on Saturday August 31, 2024 @10:52PM (#64752538)
    The "dirty secret" of the insurance industry is that most denials can be successfully appealed

    The dirty secret is that most/all applications are denied in the hope the applicant is too ill to go through the appeal process. Or ideally, become deceased by the time the appeal is processed.
    • Long ago before joining an HMO that doesnâ(TM)t deny trivial bills, about 40% of my submissions would be denied for no reason I could see. Resubmissions would be approved at about the same rate - no new info provided, just resubmitted. It became a hassle so that I did not resubmit bills for prescriptions or expenses under about $25, which I assume was their intent, to just make things annoyingly tedious so people would give up.

  • Is anyone keeping track of insurance company denials, I mean like who they deny and why. Insurance companies should get famous whenever they weasel out of paying for something.

    • Is anyone keeping track of insurance company denials, I mean like who they deny and why.

      No, and now that you know, you will proceed to do absolutely nothing about it. But enough of that unpleasantness, how about that local sport team? Looking good this year, amirite? I think we are going to win it all this year!

  • by Fons_de_spons ( 1311177 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @03:03AM (#64752852)
    So the AI battle has begun. Soon insurance companies will use AI to generate a response to the claims. We better build a few extra powerplants.
    At least we are one step ahead this time.
  • by RUs1729 ( 10049396 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @10:03AM (#64753306)

    Americans made the decision that health care should be a for-profit undertaking, turning a blind eye to the fact that providing good service is only one of the ways, among many, in which health insurance companies can maximize their profit. It is not even the most profitable one: denying coverage, laying out impenetrable billing, raising premiums, maximizing confusion and complexity, making customer contact cumbersome and inconvenient, etc. are far more profitable strategies.

    Americans have exactly what they want, and can't get rid of it even if they were to change their mind: the livelihood of many millions of Americans depends on the system remaining exactly the way it is. Even if they were to decide tomorrow that they want a federal, single-payer system - which they will only when it is a cold day in hell - it would be decades, maybe even generations, before such a thing can be implemented. In the meantime, they will carry on dying prematurely - in comparison with citizens of other developed countries - and becoming bankrupt due to health care expenses.

  • \o/ (Score:4, Funny)

    by easyTree ( 1042254 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @06:36PM (#64754448)

    Wow, AI and Fax in the same article.

    This warrants some kind of High Dynamic Range award.

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