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by chimeracoder
2415 days ago
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> Most companies use a Third Party Administrator (TPA) for the actual back office claims management. Yes > That doesn’t mean people in HR and Finance don’t have visibility into claims data. I mean, this is technically a true statement - "A does not necessarily imply not-B" - but kind of irrelevant, because as it turns out, HR and finance generally do not have visibility into individual-level claims data (as opposed to aggregate data, which is necessary for underwriting). |
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I'm not debating with you but somehow, Tim Armstrong (then CEO of AOL) found out about healthcare claims for one of his employees.[1] The story isn't clear on whether the granularity of the claims data would reveal to Tim who the particular employee was. (Even if Tim didn't know the exact employee, I'm sure he could ask a few questions and/or look at employees' sick day records to figure out which employee it was. If the company pays $1 million in a health claim, that's not necessarily going to stay a secret.)
[1] https://slate.com/human-interest/2014/02/tim-armstrong-blame...