Reed Smith Client Alerts

Key takeaways

  • Members are suing health plans that use automated decision-making tools to review and deny medical necessity coverage determinations
  • Courts permit members to pursue these claims for breach of fiduciary duty and seek injunctive relief
  • More states are proposing legislation to regulate AI use in claims review, which may restrict use of long-standing algorithms

Courts are beginning to weigh in on allegations that payors are improperly using automated decision-making tools as part of the claims review process. On March 31, the District Court for the Eastern District of California denied in part a motion to dismiss a putative class action complaint challenging a national payor’s alleged use of an automated algorithm to make medical necessity determinations.

Plaintiffs – current and former health plan members – contend that their insurer relied on an algorithm to facilitate coverage decisions en masse without individualized scrutiny based on required criteria. The members allege that, in contravention of statutory and plan terms, clinical reviewers used the tool to automatically reject hundreds or thousands of coverage decisions without opening patient files.