Thursday, May 29, 2025

Possible Lawsuit to Retrieve the Value of the Forced Writing of Prior Authorizations by the Physicians of Pennsylvania to the Benefit of Health Care Payers

 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA


Dr. Jane Doe, M.D.,
individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated,
Plaintiff,

v.
Blue Cross Blue Shield et al.,
as representative of a defendant class of health insurance payers,
Defendants.

Civil Action No. ___________

CLASS ACTION COMPLAINT

JURY TRIAL DEMANDED


COMPLAINT

Plaintiff Dr. Jane Doe, M.D., individually and on behalf of all similarly situated licensed physicians, brings this class action against defendants, a class of health insurance payers, and alleges as follows:


I. NATURE OF THE CASE

  1. This action seeks to remedy the unjust, uncompensated administrative burden imposed on physicians by the requirement of prior authorizations (PAs) demanded by health insurance companies as a condition of coverage.

  2. Defendants, acting as a class of payers, have imposed upon physicians the obligation to complete and submit PAs without compensation, in order to receive payment for services already determined to be medically necessary.

  3. Plaintiffs seek monetary relief of $30 per prior authorization submitted to any defendant payer, a reasonable estimate of the administrative cost and labor imposed on providers.


II. JURISDICTION AND VENUE

  1. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d) (Class Action Fairness Act), as the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million and the class includes members from multiple states.

  2. Venue is proper in this District under 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b) because one or more defendants reside in, are authorized to conduct business in, and regularly transact substantial business in this District.


III. PARTIES

  1. Plaintiff: Dr. Jane Doe is a board-certified physician licensed in Pennsylvania. She has submitted hundreds of PAs to health insurers without compensation and represents a class of similarly situated providers.

  2. Defendants: A defendant class composed of health insurance payers operating in Pennsylvania and across the United States, including but not limited to:

    • Blue Cross Blue Shield entities

    • UnitedHealthcare

    • Aetna/CVS Health

    • Cigna

    • Humana

    • Pharmacy Benefit Managers (e.g., OptumRx, Express Scripts)

    • Pennylvania Medicaid

    • Federal Medicare


IV. CLASS ACTION ALLEGATIONS

  1. Plaintiff brings this action under Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a) and (b)(3) on behalf of a class defined as:

"All licensed physicians in the United States who submitted one or more prior authorization requests to any health insurance payer within the past four (4) years."

  1. Numerosity: The proposed class includes 4 thousand physicians across the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, making joinder impractical.

  2. Commonality: Common questions include:

  • Whether PAs constitute uncompensated labor;

  • Whether insurers are unjustly enriched;

  • Whether compensation of $30 per PA is reasonable.

  1. Typicality: Plaintiff’s claims are typical of the class. All class members face identical harm.

  2. Adequacy: Plaintiff will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class, and has retained experienced class action counsel.


V. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

  1. Prior authorization is an administrative process where insurers require physicians to obtain approval before providing medical services or prescriptions.

  2. This process requires time, administrative staff, clinical review, and legal risk — all borne by the physician without compensation.

  3. Insurers benefit financially by delaying or denying care through PA systems but do not share the administrative cost burden.

  4. National studies estimate the average cost of PA completion to be between $25 and $35 each, depending on specialty and complexity.

  5. Any agreement between insurers and physicians that purports to waive compensation for the administrative labor of prior authorization is a contract of adhesion. These agreements are presented to physicians on a take-it-or-leave-it basis, with no meaningful opportunity to negotiate terms.

  6. Such agreements are procedurally and substantively unconscionable. Physicians are compelled to sign them under economic duress to access patients covered by the defendant insurers. The waiver of compensation for a valuable and time-consuming administrative service constitutes an unconscionable forfeiture of labor without just compensation.

  7. Accordingly, any provision in these agreements purporting to waive compensation for the performance of prior authorization tasks is void and unenforceable under state common law principles of contract and equity.

  8. Physicians are ethically and legally bound by their duty of care to their patients. When an insurer demands a prior authorization before agreeing to compensate for medically necessary treatment, the physician is placed in an impossible position: either perform uncompensated labor or deny treatment to the patient.

  9. This coercion strips physicians of meaningful choice and compels them to complete administrative labor under threat of harm to others — namely, the denial of timely or life-saving treatment to their patients. This pressure is not economic alone but moral and professional, arising from medical licensure, duty to care, and professional standards.

  10. Such compelled, uncompensated labor, undertaken under duress and threat of harm to third parties, constitutes a form of involuntary servitude in violation of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.


VI. CAUSES OF ACTION

Count I – Unjust Enrichment

  1. Defendants benefited by offloading administrative duties onto providers without compensation.

  2. It is unjust for payers to reap the cost savings and delay benefits of PAs while requiring free labor from physicians.

  3. Defendants may attempt to rely on participation agreements or insurance contracts to disclaim liability for payment. However, any such contractual provision is void as unconscionable and does not bar restitutionary relief.

Count II – Quantum Meruit

  1. Plaintiff and class members rendered a service (PA completion) with the reasonable expectation of payment.

  2. Defendants accepted the benefit and must compensate at a fair rate ($30 per authorization).

  3. Even if express contracts exist between the parties, recovery in quantum meruit is appropriate where the contract is unconscionable or void, and services have been rendered with the expectation of compensation.

Count III – Declaratory Judgment (28 U.S.C. § 2201)

  1. An actual controversy exists as to whether prior authorization paperwork constitutes compensable labor.

  2. Plaintiff seeks a declaration that insurers owe compensation for all future prior authorization requests imposed.

Count IV – Injunctive Relief

  1. Plaintiff seeks to enjoin the practice of requiring uncompensated prior authorizations as a condition of reimbursement for medically necessary care.

Count V – Violation of the Thirteenth Amendment (42 U.S.C. § 1983)

  1. The Thirteenth Amendment prohibits slavery and involuntary servitude, except as punishment for a crime.

  2. Physicians, by virtue of their licensure and professional obligation to act in the best interest of their patients, are compelled by insurance companies to provide prior authorization services without compensation under threat that their patients will be denied necessary care.

  3. This system of coercion forces providers to labor involuntarily, not for public service, but for the financial benefit of private corporations — the defendant health insurance payers.

  4. Defendants' policies and practices amount to a form of private, compelled labor with no meaningful alternative, and thus violate the Thirteenth Amendment. Plaintiffs seek declaratory and injunctive relief to bar such practice, and statutory damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.


VII. PRAYER FOR RELIEF

WHEREFORE, Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Court:

A. Certify this action as a class action;

B. Award $30 for each prior authorization submitted by class members in the past four years;

C. Enter declaratory judgment that insurers must compensate physicians for future PAs;

D. Enjoin the practice of requiring uncompensated administrative labor from physicians;

E. Award attorney's fees and costs under applicable law;

F. Grant such other and further relief as the Court deems just and proper.


VIII. JURY DEMAND

Plaintiff demands a trial by jury on all issues so triable.


Respectfully submitted,


Wednesday, May 28, 2025

The Law in Failure: Any Lawyer filing 2 Failed Medical Malpractice Cases is a Vexatious Litigator Requiring Court Supervision if Filing a Third

 

Proposed Bill

Title: Medical Malpractice Litigation Reform Act

Section 1. Short Title.
This Act shall be known and may be cited as the “Medical Malpractice Litigation Reform Act.”


Section 2. Purpose.
The purpose of this Act is to deter the repeated filing of unmeritorious medical malpractice lawsuits that increase healthcare costs, burden the judicial system, and unjustly harm licensed healthcare providers.


Section 3. Definitions.

(a) “Medical malpractice action” means any civil action filed in any court of this state alleging personal injury or wrongful death arising from the provision of or failure to provide medical care, treatment, or diagnosis by a licensed healthcare provider.

(b) “Plaintiff's attorney” means an attorney who has filed one or more medical malpractice actions on behalf of a claimant or plaintiff.

(c) “Vexatious medical malpractice litigator” means any plaintiff’s attorney who, within a five-year period, has:

  • (1) Filed two or more medical malpractice actions in which final judgment was entered in favor of any defendant due to dismissal on the merits, directed verdict, or jury verdict; or if any defendant was dropped or dismissed from the claim, and

  • (2) Failed to present prima facie objective evidence of medical negligence supported by expert certification as required by applicable law.


Section 4. Judicial Review Required for Further Actions.

(a) Any plaintiff’s attorney designated as a vexatious medical malpractice litigator shall be prohibited from filing any new medical malpractice action in any court of this state unless the attorney first obtains leave of court.

(b) The court shall deny leave to file unless the plaintiff’s attorney submits, under oath:

  • (1) A verified statement of facts establishing a good-faith basis for the action;

  • (2) A written certification by a court appointed, neutral medical expert board certified in the same specialty as the defendant, stating under penalty of perjury that the claim has merit;

  • (3) A summary of prior medical malpractice filings by the attorney within the preceding five years.

(c) The reviewing judge may, after consideration of the materials submitted, grant or deny leave to file the new action. The judge’s decision shall be final and not subject to appeal.


Section 5. Reporting and Recordkeeping.

(a) The state bar or appropriate disciplinary authority shall maintain a public registry of attorneys designated as vexatious medical malpractice litigators under this Act. This registry will also list all failed medical malpractice plaintiffs, and plaintiff experts. 

(b) Upon a second qualifying judgment under Section 3(c), the court clerk shall notify the state bar and enter the designation into the registry.


Section 6. Penalties for Violation.

Any plaintiff’s attorney who knowingly files or causes to be filed a medical malpractice action in violation of Section 4 shall be subject to:

  • (1) Dismissal of the action with prejudice;

  • (2) Court-imposed sanctions up to $10,000;

  • (3) Referral to the state disciplinary board for review. Upon filing of a third failed medical malpractice case, the revocation of the law license shall be mandatory, for 3 years, and until the licensee has shown proof of passing 60 hours of continuing legal education on medical malpractice practice. 


Section 7. Severability.
If any provision of this Act is held invalid, the remainder shall not be affected.


Section 8. Effective Date.
This Act shall take effect on January 1 of the year following enactment.

The Law in Deadly Failure: Meritless Medical Malpractice Cases, Defensive Medicine, and Continuing Massive Deaths from Medical Error

 https://yourpghlawyer.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Death-in-the-United-States.svg

The Law in Deadly Failure: Meritless Medical Malpractice Cases, Defensive Medicine, and Continuing Massive Deaths from Medical Error


💰 Financial Impact of Medical Malpractice and Defensive Medicine

Total Cost to the U.S. Healthcare System
The medical liability system in the United States imposes a significant financial burden, estimated at $55.6 billion annually, accounting for approximately 2.4% of total healthcare spending. Commonwealth Fund

Cost of Defensive Medicine
Defensive medicine—where physicians order unnecessary tests or procedures primarily to protect themselves from potential litigation—contributes substantially to healthcare costs. Estimates suggest that defensive medicine costs range from $46 billion to $300 billion annually, with most studies placing the figure between $50 billion and $65 billion. Verywell Health+3www.slideshare.net+3BMJ+3equilibriumecon.wisc.edu+1PMC+1


⚖️ Merit of Medical Malpractice Claims

Prevalence of Meritless Claims
A significant proportion of medical malpractice claims lack substantial evidence of negligence. Studies indicate that 40% to 80% of claims are judged to lack merit, meaning they do not involve errors or injuries caused by medical negligence. New England Journal of Medicine

Outcomes of Malpractice Trials
Data over two decades reveal that physicians prevail in 80% to 90% of jury trials where evidence of negligence is weak, about 70% of cases with ambiguous evidence, and approximately 50% of cases with strong evidence of negligence. PMC


🏥 Human Cost of Medical Errors

National Statistics
Medical errors are a leading cause of death in the United States. Estimates suggest that medical errors result in 251,000 to 440,000 deaths annually, making them the third leading cause of death after heart disease and cancer. PubMed

Serious Harms from Diagnostic Errors
Diagnostic errors contribute significantly to patient harm. A study estimates that diagnostic errors lead to 371,000 deaths and 424,000 permanent disabilities annually in the U.S. Hopkins Medicine

Pennsylvania-Specific Data
In Pennsylvania, the number of deaths attributed to medical errors decreased from 453 in 2005 to 253 in 2015, indicating progress yet highlighting the ongoing impact of medical errors.


🔍 Investigating Medical Errors and Legal Implications

Need for Thorough Investigations
Comprehensive investigations into medical errors are crucial for understanding root causes and preventing future incidents. However, fear of legal repercussions often discourages healthcare providers from reporting errors. The criminalization of medical errors can hinder patient safety by promoting a culture of silence.

Legal Discovery and Reporting
While some legal protections exist for patient safety data, their scope varies, and in certain cases, courts have ruled that such information is subject to discovery in litigation.


🛡️ Balancing Transparency and Legal Rights

Arguments for Excluding Error Reports from Litigation

  • Encourages Reporting: Protecting error reports from legal discovery may encourage healthcare providers to report incidents without fear of litigation.

  • Improves Patient Safety: Increased reporting can lead to better understanding and prevention of medical errors.

Arguments Against Exclusion

  • Patient Rights: Excluding error reports from litigation could infringe upon patients' rights to access information relevant to their care and potential claims.

  • Accountability: Transparency in legal proceedings is essential for holding healthcare providers accountable for negligence.


✈️ Learning from Other Industries

The aviation industry employs a "systems approach" to accident investigation, recognizing that disasters often result from multiple contributing factors. Applying a similar methodology in healthcare could enhance patient safety by addressing systemic issues rather than focusing solely on individual blame.


📚 References

  1. Medical Liability Costs Estimated at $55.6 Billion Annually.

  2. Does Defensive Medicine 'Work'? | Harvard Medical School.

  3. Twenty Years of Evidence on the Outcomes of Malpractice Claims.

  4. Medical Error Is Not the Third Leading Cause of Death.

  5. Your Health Care May Kill You: Medical Errors - PubMed.

  6. Report Highlights Public Health Impact of Serious Harms From Diagnostic Error in U.S.

  7. The state knows where medical errors are harming patients. But it won’t tell you.

  8. Measuring and Responding to Deaths From Medical Errors | PSNet.

  9. AMA studies show continued cost burden of medical liability system. Commonwealth FundHarvard Medical School+1Seton Hall eRepository+1PMCthetimes.co.uk+4McGill University+4time.com+4PubMedHopkins MedicinePublicSource+1PublicSource+1PSNet+1American Medical Association+1American Medical Association


This comprehensive overview underscores the complexities of the medical malpractice system in the U.S., highlighting the need for reforms that balance patient rights, provider accountability, and the promotion of a culture of safety.


Scapegoating Health Providers for Unavoidable Outcomes

Fraction of Claims Based on Adverse Outcome, Not Negligence:

Studies confirm that a significant portion of malpractice claims are driven by the fact that a bad outcome occurred—not necessarily because of any provable negligence:

  • One-third to one-half of all malpractice claims involve no actual error, but rather poor outcomes.
    📚 Source: Studdert DM, Mello MM, Brennan TA. “Medical malpractice.” N Engl J Med. 2004;350(3):283-292. (NEJM)

  • In these cases, healthcare providers become scapegoats for outcomes shaped by chance, patient-specific complications, or underlying conditions—none of which were preventable.


🏛️ Outdated Legal Doctrine: Chain of Causation and Foreseeability

U.S. tort law still heavily relies on the concept of proximate cause, which includes the requirement that a harm must be reasonably foreseeable at the time of the act.

  • This legal standard originates from Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad Co. (1928), which established that defendants are only liable for consequences they could foresee.

  • However, modern science views accidents through the lens of complexity theory: disasters are the convergence of multiple minor factors, often unforeseeable in isolation.


✝️ Religious Roots of Foreseeability: Establishment Clause Challenge?

Your argument is that requiring foreseeability is inherently theological—originating from a Catholic catechism view where only God can foresee the future. Therefore, applying this standard:

  • Imposes a supernatural requirement on human actors (to foresee the unforeseeable), and

  • May violate the First Amendment's Establishment Clause, which prohibits laws that establish or rely on religious doctrine.

This is a novel constitutional argument, and while not recognized by any court, it touches on a genuine philosophical inconsistency:

  • The law often demands foreseeability of complex outcomes,

  • Even though human beings demonstrably cannot forecast these outcomes reliably, especially in high-variability systems like medicine.


🛠️ Modern Remedies: Replace “Foreseeability” with Systems Thinking

Borrowing from aviation safety and engineering risk models, a systems-based approach would:

  • View medical errors as multi-factorial, not the result of a single negligent actor,

  • Focus on error prevention through process design, not punishing bad outcomes,

  • Enable anonymous reporting, learning, and adaptation—currently stifled by fear of litigation.

Such a reform could dramatically reduce scapegoating and increase actual patient safety.


❓ Would This Remedy End the "Lawless Scam"?

It would undermine a core incentive for meritless lawsuits:

  • If liability required showing how a system failure occurred—not just a bad result—it would:

    • Eliminate many outcome-based lawsuits,

    • Refocus law on preventable errors, not mere tragedy.

It would also:

  • Protect physicians acting in good faith,

  • Encourage honest reporting of medical errors,

  • Possibly run afoul of plaintiffs' attorneys and

  • Face resistance due to the entrenched legal and insurance industries.


🧾 Summary

IssueInsightEvidence
Scapegoating33–50% of claims lack evidence of errorNEJM, 2004
Legal Standard“Foreseeability” is an outdated model in disaster causationPalsgraf, 1928
Religious ImplicationForeseeability may imply godlike powers inconsistent with secular lawConstitutional argument (novel)
Better ModelUse systems-based root cause analysis, like in aviationAHRQ, IOM reports
Legal ReformCould reduce meritless claims and improve safetySystem-focused legislation needed