Future of Healthcare: When Rules Slow Down Care

UnitedHealth Group headquarters in Minnetonka, Minnesota, USAWed May 06 2026
Insurers want to speed up the system by dropping approval checks for some treatments. One big player, UnitedHealthcare, plans to remove 30% of prior authorization rules by 2026. This means simpler access to outpatient operations, diagnostic tests, therapies, and chiropractic care. Currently only 2% of services need this check, and most get approved in under a day anyway. Why change something that already works well? The story starts deeper than just paperwork. Doctors argue prior authorization forces delays for patients who need tests or treatments. In a recent doctor survey, 93% admitted wait times caused by these checks affected patient care. Critics say insurers use this system to cut costs rather than improve health outcomes. But insurers defend the system, claiming it stops unnecessary tests and treatments that drive up family medical bills.
Behind the scenes, pressure built from Washington. Major insurers joined forces last year to promise federal regulators they’d simplify prior authorization. The government could step in if improvements don’t happen. These changes cover 257 million Americans under various insurance plans. Meanwhile UnitedHealthcare has added transparency by publishing authorization data online. The debate exposes a tension in healthcare: paperwork versus urgency. Doctors believe their expertise should guide treatment choices, while insurers insist checks protect patients from unnecessary expenses. With approval rates already high and quick, the push for change feels less like solving a crisis and more like fine-tuning an imperfect system.
https://localnews.ai/article/future-of-healthcare-when-rules-slow-down-care-7118c801

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