What if your disability
benefits
were suddenly cut off?
A Dateline NBC Investigation
NBC News
Oct. 16 Insurance we buy it for
peace of mind to cover our homes, our health, our lives. Millions of Americans
have disability insurance to help replace lost income in case of a serious illness
or injury. If you cant work, those benefits may be crucial for you and your
family. But what if, suddenly, unexpectedly, your benefits were cut off? Thats
what happened to the people in this story. We found some startling charges against
the biggest disability insurance provider in the country. Correspondent John Larson
reports in this Dateline Investigation.
IT BEGAN ON a stretch
of Interstate 40 in Albuquerque, New Mexico in February of 1998 a car salesman
swerves to avoid some rocks, and the world suddenly turns upside down.
The
nurses and all the physicians they were saying, Do you have any feeling?
Can you move your legs? says John Montano. And I kept telling
them, I cant feel anything from the chest down.
The
accident had severed John Montanos spinal cord. Although he was spared some
limited use of his arms, hes considered a quadriplegic paralyzed
for life.
And what lay ahead could hardly have looked worse. Unable to work
or support his family, Montano faced losing everything. But like millions of Americans,
he had prepared for just such a disaster. He had paid $59 a month for disability
insurance, which promised if he was ever too sick or too injured to keep working,
it would help replace his lost income. The checks began arriving as promised,
but after two years he got a shocking letter. His disability benefits were being
cut off.
I was scared, says Montano. I was frightened. I
go, Well, theres got to be a mistake.
But there was
no mistake. Montanos insurance company had decided that despite his paralysis
he no longer deserved benefits. So what was going on? Sources tell Dateline that
what happened to john Montano may have been part of something much larger. a dateline
investigation into whether the largest disability carrier in the United States
Unum provident launched a company-wide effort to cut costs aggressively,
and in the process, unfairly denied benefits, selling out people it promised to
protect.
They just basically cut me off and that was it, says
Montano.
In Montanos case, UnumProvident claimed to have good reason.
It said it had surveillance tape, that Montano had improved
immensely and he should go back to work selling cars.
Was there any
way that Montano was faking his quadriplegia?
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Absolutely not. Theres no way, says
Dr. Jonathan Burg, Montanos doctor.
He says the records are clear, Montano
is a quadriplegic.
John Larson: Did you tell the company, look
Ill take any test you want me to take?
John Montano: Yes.
John Larson: And so did they do that? Did they evaluate you?
John
Montano: No, I didnt hear back from them.
The disability
and life insurance industry says it faces $1.5 billion in fraudulent claims every
year. So you can understand why it might investigate Montanos claim. But
when UnumProvident finally shared its surveillance tape Dr. Burg says it showed
nothing new just John Montano driving his specially-equipped van, demonstrating
what everyone already knew: Montano had a limited use of his upper arms. In a
letter to UnumProvident, Dr. Burg stated by all standards this man is completely
and totally disabled.
Meanwhile, his benefits cut off, Montano spiraled
towards bankruptcy. His wife had divorced him after the accident. Now faced with
losing his home and his children, he says he became suicidal.
John Larson:
It sounds like it was pretty close.
John Montano: Yes, yes.
So how could something like this happen? Some people say they know.
These
three former UnumProvident employees tell a disturbing story of a company obsessed
with finding excuses to cut off benefits.
They have to literally fight
to get their benefits, says one.
John Larson: Did you feel pressure
to close claims?
Former employee: Absolutely.
They
asked Dateline to conceal their identities because theyre afraid of reprisals.
Former employee: Find ways to close claims. Just look so very
carefully to find anything that will disqualify them from the claim.
Former employee: They even gave incentives.
John Larson: Incentives
how?
Former employee: Incentives for closing claims. If we projected
that we were going to close 30, if we get to 30 well have a pizza party
or well have an ice cream party.
Would the company pressure
employees to terminate claims? Financial reports show that in 1993, the company
was losing millions. Then came new management and a complete reversal. It began
making millions. How did they do it? UnumProvident says by restructuring and making
smart business decisions.
But internal documents suggest the company had
a new game plan to help it deny as many claims as it could.
Dr. William Feist,
was one of Providents two staff physicians when new management took over
in 1993. He left the company two years later. Here in a deposition, he describes
under oath how the company changed.
Dr. Feist said: There was no concern
for the individual. It was just bottom line. If we can terminate this file, were
going to do it.
Dr. Feist says the company first began targeting the
policyholders who were costing the company the most money at meetings called roundtables.
The object of the roundtable was to cut off the high dollar claims,
says Feist.
UnumProvident urged Dateline not to believe Dr. Feist, saying
his knowledge of the company is outdated, and that he has twice signed affidavits
which included false information. Dr. Feist says they were simple mistakes. And
remember, Dr. Feist isnt the only one speaking out.
It became
a witch hunt, says one.
These people say they encountered similar roundtables
years later.
Former employee: It was all looking for loopholes
to close the claim.
John Larson: And if you cant do it,
we have a team of experts here to figure out how you can.
Former employee:
It was mandatory. Even if you didnt have a claim, youd better
find one.
They say most vulnerable were policyholders with so-called
subjective illnesses illnesses that dont show up on x-rays or MRIs,
like mental illness, chronic pain, migraines or even Parkinsons.
Former
employee: So theyre fatigued. Prove it. So theyve got achy joints.
Prove it. Why cant they work?
John Larson: And if they cant
prove it?
Former employee: Theyre out of there.
John Larson:
Denied.
Former employee: Denied.
And they
are not the only ones saying this. In all, ten Unumprovident employees agreed
to speak with Dateline, but only if we promised not to reveal their names. We
can tell you this about them their jobs range from claim representatives
all the way up to vice presidents. Some left the company on their own, some were
fired, and some still work at Unum provident. But all have described the same
atmosphere one of intense pressure coming from management down to employees
pressure to cut off benefits to policyholders.
Dateline also searched
thousands of pages of internal corporate documents and court records and found
evidence that appears to back up what they say.
This is a series of internal
monthly reports that show company savings seem to be growing the result
of cutting claims terminated claims have reached a record level.
And we found evidence that suggests the company set goals for cutting claims,
deciding ahead of time how many claims should be denied. Like this 1995 top-level
memo. It spells out a company-wide goal to terminate $132 million in claims.
An internal e-mail from last year alerted a group of adjusters they have one week
to close 18 more claims to meet our projections. These
people say if they didnt meet their projections, theyd have what they
called fire drills intensive efforts to find claims to close.
John Larson: The image is of a fire drill. A bell goes off. Everybody
rallies to a cause. What was the cause?
Former employee: The cause
was looking for opportunities to close a file.
John Larson: Deny
claims.
Former employee: Deny claims.
Unum Provident
would not agree to an on-camera interview, but vehemently denies that it sets
goals to terminate claims. In a letter to Dateline, it says it does estimate
claim results to project a business plan into the future
which may have been mischaracterized or misinterpreted by others.
Also, it says that it will pay 3.6 billion in benefits...this year.
And that of all the people who filed claims with UnumProvident last year, only
2% were found to be not disabled. And, it says it has a consistent record
in paying claims.
UnumProvident is more than just claims people and
managers, its also doctors over 100 of them doctors sworn
to do no harm. Wouldnt a Unum Provident doctor stop the company from cutting
off disabled people? Not according to this policy holder.
If I could
have every wish in the world, Id wish that I could teach again and see my
kids get older. Two wishes, says Rosemary Wright.
Once a healthy, vibrant
school teacher from Illinois, Rosemary Wright began suffering from a progressive,
fatal form of emphysema. Even the smallest activity can leave her gasping for
breath.
Her doctors say the kind of emphysema Wright has is genetic, its
not from smoking. The same disease had already killed her younger brother and
now its killing her.
When Wright became too sick to teach, Unum Provident
began paying her disability benefits. But two years later, just as in John Montanos
case, the company cut her off.
I opened that letter and I couldnt
believe it, says Wright. I thought, Why? I mean this must
be a mistake.
Unum Provident based its decision on the opinion of a
UnumProvident staff doctor who not only never examined Wright in person, but disregarded
the opinions of Wrights two doctors both lung specialists who had
examined her and found her totally and completely disabled.
So
how could a UnumProvident doctor help cut her off? Dr. Fergal McSharry, who doesnt
know Rosemary Wright, worked for Unum Provident for a year and a half. He says
it is more about the system than the doctor.
John Larson: Doctor,
were they interested in your honest, objective medical opinion?
Dr.
McSharry: No.
McSharry says doctors at UnumProvident were
pressured to write narrow medical reports to help the company deny benefits.
Dr. McSharry: We were a means to an end.
John Larson: And
the end was?
Dr. McSharry: The end was denial.
And if too many of their opinions favored the claimants, McSharry says doctors
would be reprimanded in his case, by his boss.
Dr. McSharry: I
was told I had fallen off the career path.
John Larson: What did
you feel you had to do to get back on their career path?
Dr. McSharry:
You know I was just going to have to do more of what the claims people wanted
me to do.
John Larson: And what was that?
Dr. McSharry:
That was to make it easy for them to deny the claim.
Dr.
McSharry says like other doctors who work at UnumProvident, he succumbed to the
pressure.
John Larson: Did you ever change a medical opinion because
you were being pressured?
Dr. McSharry: Yes. I did.
John Larson: These were cases where in your best medical opinion, you thought
these people were either sick or impaired, or disabled. You reversed your own
best judgment?
Dr. McSharry: I did that. I didnt want to
lose my job. I didnt want to upset everybody around me and I tried to play
within the rules.
McSharry says he did it only a couple of times
and vowed never to do it again. Even so, if what hes saying is true, they
got his medical soul.
Yes. Im only human, he says. I
you know, I gave in. Once or twice. I just hope I didnt hurt somebody too
badly.
UnumProvident says it doesnt pressure doctors to terminate
claims. So what happened to Dr. McSharry? He was fired from Unum Provident for
what the company calls poor performance. It also says Dr. McSharry
was forced to resign from other jobs for similar reasons.
But McSharry says
that losing those other jobs had nothing to do with his performance, and the real
reason he was fired from UnumProvident was that he began standing up to the company,
refusing to play along.
In fact, five of Datelines sources back up
Dr. McSharrys story specifically that doctors were pressured to help
cut off benefits. Dr. McSharry is now suing UnumProvident.
Dr. McSharry:
I dont have a problem with people setting targets as long as those
targets are reasonable and dont hurt people.
John Larson: Were
these targets reasonable?
Dr. McSharry: No, not at all.
John Larson: Did they hurt people?
Dr. McSharry: They hurt
people every day.
They didnt just take the money away
from me, says Rosemary Wright. But they took a sense of dignity away
from me.
After Unum Provident ended her disability payments, Rosemary
Wright says she was forced to begin spending money she had saved for a lung transplant
just to cover living expenses. Wright sued the Unum Provident, which suddenly
reversed itself, reimbursed her back benefits and began paying her again. But
Wright has not dropped her lawsuit, and says the stress took its toll.
I
wasnt sleeping, says Wright. You know I was a wreck and yes, last
year was the sickest year Ive ever had. I believe they robbed me of a whole
year of my life.
As for John Montano, the quadriplegic, he also filed suit
against Unum Provident and the company settled with him for an undisclosed amount
of money.
John Larson: In the end what was this companys
promise worth?
John Montano: To me, nothing. Their word, the way
they operated, theyre totally unethical.
UnumProvident says
it regrets how it handled the cases of Wright and Montano, but says they are exceptions.
It also says it handles 400,000 new claims a year and it does on occasion,
make a mistake.
Yet, in the eyes of at least one insurance commissioner,
it may be more than an occasional mistake.
There are some substantial
problem areas, says the Georgia Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine.
He told Dateline that he began investigating UnumProvidents disability practices
more than a year ago. He says his investigation should be complete by the end
of the year.
Unless something radical changes, there probably will be
some disciplinary action based on what we have already found, he says.
Unum Provident says any problems in Georgia represent a small percentage of their
overall claims, and it will do what is necessary to correct these issues.
In the end, both Montano and Wright say no one should be treated the way they
were treated cut off, abandoned by a company that had promised if the worst
ever happened, it would be there for them.
Its like stealing,
says John Montano. They should be held accountable for that.