Marine Corps veteran Ron Winters clearly recalls his doctor鈥檚 sobering assessment of his bladder cancer diagnosis in August 2022.
鈥淭his is bad,鈥 the 66-year-old Durant, Oklahoma, resident remembered his urologist saying. Winters braced for the fight of his life.
Little did he anticipate, however, that he wouldn鈥檛 be waging war only against cancer. He also was up against the Department of Veterans Affairs, which Winters blames for dragging its feet and setting up obstacles that have delayed his treatments.
Winters didn鈥檛 undergo cancer treatment at a VA facility. Instead, he sought care from a specialist through the Veterans Health Administration鈥檚 , established in 2018 to enhance veterans鈥 choices and reduce their wait times. But he said the prior authorization process was a prolonged nightmare.
鈥淔or them to take weeks 鈥 up to months 鈥 to provide an authorization is ridiculous,鈥 Winters said. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter if it鈥檚 cancer or not.鈥
After his initial diagnosis, Winters said, he waited four weeks for the VA to approve the procedure that allowed his urologic oncologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas to remove some of the cancer. Then, when he finished chemotherapy in March, he was forced to wait another month while the VA considered approving surgery to remove his bladder. Even routine imaging scans that Winters needs every 90 days to track progress require preapproval.
In a written response, VA press secretary Terrence Hayes acknowledged that a 鈥渄elay in care is never acceptable.鈥 After 麻豆女优 Health News inquired about Winters鈥 case, the VA began working with him to get his ongoing care authorized.
鈥淲e will also urgently review this matter and take steps to ensure that it does not happen again,鈥 Hayes told 麻豆女优 Health News.
Prior authorization isn鈥檛 unique to the VA. Most private and federal health insurance programs require patients to secure preapprovals for certain treatments, tests, or prescription medications. The process is intended to reduce spending and avoid unnecessary, ineffective, or duplicative care, although the degree to which companies and agencies .
Insurers argue prior authorization makes the U.S. health care system more efficient by cutting waste 鈥 theoretically a win for patients who may be harmed by excessive or futile treatment. But critics say prior authorization has become a tool that insurers use to restrict or delay expensive care. It鈥檚 an especially alarming issue for people diagnosed with cancer, for whom prompt treatment can mean the difference between life and death.
鈥淚鈥檓 interested in value and affordability,鈥 said Fumiko Chino, a member of the Affordability Working Group for the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. But the way prior authorization is used now allows insurers to implement 鈥渄enial by delay,鈥 she said.
Cancer is one of the most expensive categories of disease to treat in the U.S., according to the . And, in 2019, patients spent more than $16 billion out-of-pocket on their cancer treatment, by the National Cancer Institute found.
To make matters worse, many cancer patients have had oncology care delayed because of prior authorization hurdles, with some facing delays of more than two weeks, according to research Chino and colleagues in October. Another recent study found that major in response to imaging requests, most often in endocrine and gastrointestinal cancer cases.
The federal government is designed to improve prior authorization for millions of people covered by Medicare, Medicaid, and federal marketplace plans. The reforms, if implemented, would shorten the period insurers are permitted to consider prior authorization requests and would also require companies to provide more information when they issue a denial.
In the meantime, patients 鈥 many of whom are facing the worst diagnosis of their lives 鈥 must navigate a system marked by roadblocks, red tape, and appeals.
鈥淭his is cruel and unusual,鈥 said Chino, a radiation oncologist. A two-week delay could be deadly, and that it continues to happen is 鈥渦nconscionable,鈥 she said.
Chino鈥檚 research has also shown that prior authorization is directly related to increased anxiety among cancer patients, eroding their trust in the health care system and wasting both the provider鈥檚 and the patient鈥檚 time.
Leslie Fisk, 62, of New Smyrna Beach, Florida, was diagnosed in 2021 with lung and brain cancer. After seven rounds of chemotherapy last year, her insurance company denied radiation treatment recommended by her doctors, deeming it medically unnecessary.
鈥淚 remember losing my mind. I need this radiation for my lungs,鈥 Fisk said. After fighting Florida Health Care Plans鈥 denial 鈥渢ooth and nail,鈥 Fisk said, the insurance company relented. The insurer did not respond to requests for comment.
Fisk called the whole process 鈥渉orribly traumatic.鈥
鈥淵ou have to navigate the most complicated system on the planet,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e just sitting there waiting for them to take care of you, they won鈥檛.鈥
A that patients who are covered by Medicaid appear to be particularly impacted by prior authorization, regardless of their health concerns. About 1 in 5 adults on Medicaid reported that their insurer had denied or delayed prior approval for a treatment, service, visit, or drug 鈥 double the rate of adults with Medicare.
鈥淐onsumers with prior authorization problems tend to face other insurance problems,鈥 such as trouble finding an in-network provider or reaching the limit on covered services, the report noted. They are also 鈥渇ar more likely to experience serious health and financial consequences compared to people whose problems did not involve prior authorization.鈥
In some cases, patients are pushing back.

In November, that Cigna admitted to making an error when it denied coverage to a 47-year-old Tennessee woman as she prepared to undergo a double-lung transplant to treat lung cancer. In Michigan, a former health insurance that the company had 鈥渃rossed the line鈥 in denying treatment for a man with lymphoma. And Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana 鈥渕et its match鈥 when the company denied a Texas trial lawyer鈥檚 cancer treatment, in November.
Countless others have turned to social media to shame their health insurance companies into approving prior authorization requests. Legislation has been introduced in 鈥 from California to North Carolina 鈥 to address the problem.
Back in Oklahoma, Ron Winters is still fighting. According to his wife, Teresa, the surgeon said if Ron could have undergone his operation sooner, they might have avoided removing his bladder.
In many ways, his story echoes the from nearly a decade ago, in which veterans across the country were languishing 鈥 some even dying 鈥 as they waited for care.
In 2014, for example, on veteran Thomas Breen, who was kept waiting for months to be seen by a doctor at the VA in Phoenix. He died of stage 4 bladder cancer before the appointment was scheduled.
Winters鈥 cancer has spread to his lungs. His diagnosis has advanced to stage 4.
"Really, nothing has changed,鈥 Teresa Winters said. 鈥淭he VA鈥檚 processes are still broken."
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