Alan C. Olson & Associates, s.c.
WEBLOG

Home
Attorneys
Contact Us
Site Map


Subscribe
RSS 2.0 feed
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to Bloglines
Add to your My Feedster
Add to your NewsGator
My MSN
What is RSS?

Disability carriers must provide for a full and fair review including the four cornerstones of Reason, Reference, Description, and Explanation, pursuant to ERISA

Posted by: Alan Olson
March 18, 2008
Topic: Disability carriers must provide for a full and fair review including the four cornerstones of Reason, Reference, Description, and Explanation, pursuant to ERISA.

The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) sets certain minimum requirements for procedures and notification when a plan administrator denies a claim for long-term disability benefits. In a nutshell, ERISA requires that specific reasons for denial be communicated to the claimant and that the administrator afford the claimant an opportunity for "full and fair review". These requirements insure that when a claimant appeals a denial to the plan administrator, he or she will be able to address the determinative issues and have a fair chance to present the claimant's case.

A "full and fair review" has the four following requirements: 1) a specific reason for the denial; 2) a specific reference to pertinent plan provisions on which the denial is based; 3) a description of any additional material or information necessary for the claimant to perfect the claim; and, 4) an explanation of why such material or information is necessary.

Federal courts have held that a LTD carrier's comment to the claimant that, "[y]ou should include all relevant information to support your claim for benefits", does not satisfy the requirements of ERISA regulations mandating that the denial be "written in a manner calculated to be understood by the participant." One court scrutinized a letter ambiguously informing the claimant that she, "should include appropriate issues, comments, and reasons why you think your claim should not have been denied." Such a description is too vague to satisfy ERISA's notice requirements, the court held. Similarly, a benefit termination letter failed to satisfy notice requirements where it advised claimant to, "forward any additional information or medical reports which you wish to have considered as part of your appeal".

The rationale behind these court decisions in favor of the LTD claimants is that, "describing additional information needed and explaining its relevance enables a participant both to appreciate the fatal inadequacy of his claim as it stands and to gain a meaningful review by knowing with what to supplement the record."

As held in White v. Airline Pilots Ass'n, Intern., 364 F.Supp.2d 747, 762 (N.D.Ill., 2005), MetLife conducted a careless and superficial review of White's claim by not following its own procedure, not describing the background or qualifications for the internal MetLife reviewers (the "nurse consultants"), and not attaching parts of the record until filing its response brief in the case. After a disorganized and imperfect review, MetLife arbitrarily concluded that White was able to perform her "own occupation" without considering what White's occupation required. Id.

Disability benefit denial letters lacking the four cornerstones of reason, reference, description, and explanation, pursuant to ERISA, are defective and must be remedied through an award of disability benefits to the claimant and all additional statutory remedies.

Alan Olson

Alan C. Olson practices disability law from his offices in New Berlin, Wisconsin, and throughout the United States. AOlson@Employee-Advocates.com

        

Topics

A disability insurance carrier's use of the same case manager to deny each internal appeal violates the claimant's right to a full and fair review.
Bad Faith Denial of Long-Term Disability Claim Warrants Award for Emotional Distress, Loss of Reputation, Economic Injury, Punitive Damages, and Attorney Fees
Court Denies Reliance Standard?s Untimely Request For Medical Exam
Court Finds MetLife Arbitrary and Capricious in its Denial of LTD Benefits
Diaz finally gets his day in court against Prudential
Disability Carriers Must Pay the Price for Their Arrogance in Denying Benefits
Disability Insurer Repeatedly Refuses to Pay for Surgery, Breaks Settlement Agreements, and Postpones Treatment Causing Claimant Anxiety Resulting in $1.5M Verdict
Disability Insurers Must Now Feel Your Pain
Disability Plan Documents With Inconsistent Definitions of "Disability" Will be Construed in Favor of the Employee
Disability carriers must provide for a full and fair review including the four cornerstones of Reason, Reference, Description, and Explanation, pursuant to ERISA.
Disability claims-handling systems put profit before disability benefits
Employees Cannot be Fired Because of Expensive Medical Insurance Claims
Evidence of Disability Found in Bedrock of Social Security Disability Determination
Evidence suggesting a mistake in diagnosis, lack of detail, and unexplained contradictions are not fatal to LTD claim
How to Prove your Disability to the Insurance Company
How to penetrate the LTD carrier's administrative record for evidence of its incompetence and bad faith.
Insurance Company May Allow Extra Time For New Medical Evidence
Insurer's Cancellation of Health Coverage After Cancer Diagnosis Results in $9M Award
LTD Carrier That Exceeds 45 Day Review Period is Held to Stricter Standard
LTD carrier's failure to produce the entire administrative record may result in a ruling favorable to the claimant.
Long-Term Disability Standard Stricter After 24 Months
NFL Retirement plan refuses to pay disability to former football player in violation of ERISA.
People Denied Long-Term Disability Benefits Need Make-Whole Remedies
Remember To Use SOAP To Prove Your LTD Claim
Sufferers of CFS or Fibromyalgia Cannot Be Denied Their Long-Term Disability Benefits by an Insurer Without a Specialist
UNUM consents to $15,000,000 fine and process to correct denied claims back to 1997
What does it mean to be disabled under the Social Security Administration?



Archives

March, 2008



The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice. You should consult an attorney for individual advice regarding your own situation.

Copyright © 2008 by Alan C. Olson & Associates, s.c. All rights reserved. You may reproduce materials available at this site for your own personal use and for non-commercial distribution. All copies must include this copyright statement.