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Woman Petitions Health Insurer After Company Approves 鈥 Then Rejects 鈥 Her Infusions

When 麻豆女优 Health News published an article in August about the 鈥減rior authorization hell鈥 Sally Nix said she went through to secure approval from her insurance company for the expensive monthly infusions she needs, we thought her story had a happy ending.

That鈥檚 because, after 麻豆女优 Health News sent questions to Nix鈥檚 insurance company, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, it retroactively approved $36,000 worth of treatments she thought she owed. Even better, she also learned she would qualify for the infusions moving forward.

Good news all around 鈥 except it didn鈥檛 last for long. After all, this is the U.S. health care system, where even patients with good insurance aren鈥檛 guaranteed affordable care.

To recap: For more than a decade, Nix, of Statesville, North Carolina, has suffered from autoimmune diseases, chronic pain, and fatigue, as well as a condition called trigeminal neuralgia, which is marked by bouts of electric shock-like pain that鈥檚 so intense it鈥檚 commonly known as the 鈥.鈥

鈥淚t is a pain that sends me to my knees,鈥 Nix said in October. 鈥淢y entire family鈥檚 life is controlled by the betrayal of my body. We haven鈥檛 lived normally in 10 years.鈥

A photograph of Sally Nix sitting beside her service dog in her home.
Sally Nix said she went through 鈥減rior authorization hell鈥 to secure approval from her insurance company for the expensive monthly infusions she needs to manage a pain disorder. So, it felt like whiplash when she learned the approval was being withheld again. In September, she called out the insurer鈥檚 tactics in a Change.org campaign that has garnered more than 21,000 signatures. (Logan Cyrus for 麻豆女优 Health News)

Late in 2022, Nix started receiving intravenous immunoglobulin infusions to treat her diseases. She started walking two miles a day with her service dog. She could picture herself celebrating, free from pain, at her daughter鈥檚 summer 2024 wedding.

鈥淚 was so hopeful,鈥 she said.

But a few months after starting those infusions, she found out that her insurance company wouldn鈥檛 cover their cost anymore. That鈥檚 when she started 鈥渞aising Cain about it鈥 on Instagram and Facebook.

You probably know someone like Sally Nix 鈥 someone with a chronic or life-threatening illness whose doctor says they need a drug, procedure, or scan, and whose insurance company has replied: No.

Prior authorization was conceived decades ago to rein in health care costs by eliminating duplicative and ineffective treatment. Not only does overtreatment waste every year, but it also potentially harms patients.

However, critics worry that prior authorization has now become a way for health insurance companies to save money, sometimes at the expense of patients鈥 lives. 麻豆女优 Health News has heard from hundreds of people in the past year relating their prior authorization horror stories.

When we first met Nix, she was battling her insurance company to regain authorization for her infusions. She鈥檇 been forced to pause her treatments, unable to afford $13,000 out-of-pocket for each infusion.

Finally, it seemed like months of her hard work had paid off. In July, Nix was told by staff at both her doctor鈥檚 office and her hospital that Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois would allow her to restart treatment. Her balance was marked 鈥減aid鈥 and disappeared from the insurer鈥檚 online portal.

But the day after the 麻豆女优 Health News story was published, Nix said, she learned the message had changed. After restarting treatment, she received a letter from the insurer saying her diagnoses didn鈥檛 actually qualify her for the infusions. It felt like health insurance whiplash.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e robbing me of my life,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e robbing me of so much, all because of profit.鈥

Dave Van de Walle, a spokesperson for Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, said the company would not discuss individual patients鈥 cases.

鈥淧rior authorization is often a requirement for certain treatments,鈥 Van de Walle said in a written statement, 鈥渁nd BCBSIL administers benefits according to medical policy and the employer鈥檚 benefit.鈥

But Nix is a Southern woman of the 鈥淪teel Magnolia鈥 variety. In other words, she鈥檚 not going down without a fight.

In September, she called out her insurance company鈥檚 tactics in a that has garnered more than 21,000 signatures. She has also filed complaints against her insurance company with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, U.S. Department of Labor, Illinois Department of Insurance, and Illinois attorney general.

Even so, Nix said, she feels defeated.

Not only is she still waiting for prior authorization to restart her immunoglobulin infusions, but her insurance company recently required Nix to secure preapproval for another treatment 鈥 routine numbing injections she has received for nearly 10 years to treat the nerve pain caused by trigeminal neuralgia.

鈥淚t is reprehensible what they鈥檙e doing. But they鈥檙e not only doing it to me,鈥 said Nix, who is now reluctantly taking prescription opioids to ease her pain. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e doing it to other patients. And it鈥檚 got to stop.鈥

Do you have an experience with prior authorization you鈥檇 like to share? to tell your story.

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