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by davrosthedalek
521 days ago
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Of course it does. The patients wanted care early enough to save their live. They denied them that care. Hypothetical care after death is worthless. Whether they denied that care by not paying for it (which means people could have gotten that care if they would have had the means), or by limiting the amount of care in a period of time, doesn't really matters for the person who didn't get it. Why do you think the healthcare resources (number of beds, hospitals etc) are limited? Why isn't there a second hospital? By the way, would they have paid for an operation in a different country if space would be available there? No? So they denied that healthcare. |
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I'm sure there's plenty of cases where United health approved the claim and the patient also didn't get treated in time, it doesn't count as a denied claim.