A U.S. district court judge Nov. 3 ordered United Behavioral Health, part of UnitedHealth Group, to reprocess close to 67,000 mental health and substance use disorder benefit claims denied over a six-year period.

The order in Wit v. UBH also includes a 10-year injunction requiring UBH to exclusively apply medical necessity criteria developed by non-profit clinical specialty associations; appointment of a special master to oversee implementation of the court’s order; and employee training in the proper use of court-ordered medical necessity criteria.

In prior rulings in the case, the court found “pervasive and long-standing violations of ERISA by [UBH]” in which “UBH denied mental health and substance use disorder treatment coverage to tens of thousands of [individuals] using internal guidelines that were inconsistent with the terms of the [individuals’] health insurance plans.”

Related News Articles

Headline
The AHA collaborated with LCMC Health in New Orleans to spotlight innovative efforts that extend care beyond hospital walls. LCMC Health supports families…
Headline
A report by the Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General found that many Medicare Advantage and Medicaid managed care plans…
Perspective
Public
More than 48 million Americans — 16.8% of the 12-and-older population — have a substance use disorder (SUD), according to the 2025 National Survey on Drug Use…
Headline
An AHA blog published Sept. 16 highlights programs and practices by Boston Medical Center leaders and staff that support residents’ mental health, emotional…
Headline
HHS awards $1.5 billion in opioid response grants to states, tribal communities The Department of Health and Human Services announced yesterday that it…
Headline
Susan Doherty, AHA’s vice president of field engagement, and Rebecca Chickey, AHA’s senior director of behavioral health services, write on the unique ways…