A_Man_Who_Tries wrote: Sat Dec 07, 2024 5:44 am
Gramsci wrote: Sat Dec 07, 2024 4:54 am
Honestly, it surprises me this doesn’t happen more often considering the US gun culture and increasingly violent political climate.
We can but hope. Seems the "we're not covering overtime anaesthetic" people changed their tune in short order at the sight of customers 'pushing back'.
You know though, any causal relationship seems maybe far-fetched to me.
Sure, the insurance company (not the same one, I should add) did that. And maybe sensed a great PR opportunity.
Thing is, huge billing decisions like that aren't made overnight: There are boards and lawyers and all kinds of consultations and bureaucracy. This is a
huge, rival company.
So I suspect that decision had been brewing for a while. Of course, I can't be sure. But insurance companies don't just snap their fingers when a rival CEO gets murdered and make calls like so. It's not some evil dicks rubbing their fingers together in a room making snap decisions. (Well, not
entirely. And the industry would probably be less Byzantine and fucked up if it were, honestly. These are huge corporate machines w/lots of moving parts, which is part of why getting a human to discuss your bill takes months of appeal. These fuckers tend to be craftier and more methodical than that.)
The boring-ass public (and its lawyers) had been fighting that Blue Cross decision since November. The governor of NYC had her hand in appealing the decision after complaints to her office. It would seem this did not go down in one day's time. Despite those great (honestly, great) optics for Blue Cross!