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California's insurance regulator said Monday his office has found more than 700 violations by the state's largest
for-profit health insurer, including late payment of claims, giving misleading information to consumers and failing to cooperate
with regulators.
Anthem Blue Cross faces a maximum $10,000 penalty for each violation, Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner said. His office
said the violations occurred between 2006 and 2009.
Kristin Binns, a spokeswoman for the insurer, said the company takes the allegations seriously, though she noted they represent
a fraction of the company's millions of claims.
The Los Angeles-based company, a subsidiary of Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc., has been criticized recently by Poizner,
state and federal lawmakers, and Obama administration officials for proposing rate hikes as high as 39 percent. The company
put those increases on hold until May 1.
Poizner said he was filing official accusations with the state's Office of Administrative Hearing alleging the policy
handling violations. That will trigger hearings on whether the insurer should be fined.
"Complaints just keep coming in and increasing over time. When it gets into the hundreds, it gets my attention,"
Poizner said at a state Capitol news conference. "It's only when a health care company doesn't take corrective
action or is belligerent or uncooperative with us that we take this type of action, and that's the case with Anthem Blue
Cross."
The 732 violations include allegations of 277 failures to pay claims in 30 days, 143 failures to respond quickly to regulators
during complaint investigations, 66 instances of misrepresenting facts or insurance policies to consumers, 25 failures to
pay interest on claims, 21 failures to pay or contest a claim within 30 days, 22 unreasonably low settlement offers, and 178
other miscellaneous delays and claims violations.
"As the largest insurer in California, our responsibility is to pay the many millions of claims on behalf of our members
each year fairly, fully and promptly," company spokeswoman Binns said in a written statement. "While this review
represents a small fraction of those claims, it is nonetheless very important to us to make sure we take any corrective action
that may be necessary."
In February 2009, the company agreed to pay a $1 million fine and reinstate 2,330 people whose insurance was rescinded after
they submitted bills for expensive care.
The company also agreed as part of last year's settlement with the California Department of Insurance to reimburse the
dropped patients for medical costs they paid after their policies were terminated. The company said that would cost another
$14 million.
Anthem's proposed rate increases will be the focus of an oversight hearing at the Capitol Tuesday. Anthem President Leslie
Margolin is scheduled to appear before the Assembly Health Committee, along with several insurance regulators, health care
experts and consumer advocates.
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