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The Fight for Fair Healthcare: No Surprise Bill and Industry Reforms
The fight for fair healthcare is heating up as insurers exploit shifting politics to maximize profits, denying care and burdening doctors. Providers, organizations, and investors are pushing back—and at No Surprise Bill, we’re joining the fight to hold them accountable.
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The Power Play: How Insurers Are Exploiting the System
At No Surprise Bill, we’ve seen insurers prioritize profits over patients, using prior authorization to delay and deny care. The controversy over UnitedHealth’s alleged surgery interruption highlights a bigger issue—insurers, not doctors, dictating treatment. With industry lobbying to weaken Medicare Advantage protections, the fight for fair healthcare is more urgent than ever.
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Medicare Advantage: Insurers Want More Control, Less Oversight
Insurers are pushing CMS for weaker regulations, from blocking obesity drug coverage to loosening prior authorization rules—all to boost profits at patients' expense. With Dr. Mehmet Oz’s possible CMS appointment, they see a chance to rewrite the rules in their Favor.
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Investors Are Pushing Back, But Insurers Fight Transparency
In response to Dr. Potter’s case, UnitedHealth investors are demanding accountability—calling for audits, investigations, and apologies for wrongful denials. Yet, UnitedHealth dismisses these as “routine business operations,” exposing a deeply broken system.
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The Fight for Prior Authorization Reform
The fight against prior authorization abuse is gaining traction as healthcare leaders and states push for transparency, fewer provider burdens, and legislative reforms. Meanwhile, insurers like UnitedHealth and Cigna make vague promises but resist real accountability.
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The Bottom Line: Now Is the Time to Fight Back
This is a fight for the future of healthcare. Insurers count on inaction to push their profit-driven agenda, but No Surprise Bill won’t back down. We’re exposing abuses, advocating for stronger regulations, and pushing for real reform—because patient care must come before corporate greed.
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