The Shoulder
The Shoulder
46
Insurancehearty-newt-549

Health insurance denied my ambulance after they literally cut me out of my car — anyone dealt with this?

I genuinely don't know where to start with this. Got T-boned on the highway a few months back, my door was crushed so bad the fire department had to use the jaws of life to get me out. I was unconscious for part of it. First responders on scene said my vitals were unstable and they were worried about internal injuries, so they called for an air transport. An ambulance took me maybe ten minutes down the road to a landing zone where the helicopter was waiting.

Fast forward to recovering at home and I get hit with this massive bill. Turns out my health insurance decided the ambulance leg of the trip — the ten-minute ride to the landing zone — didn't meet their threshold for "medically necessary emergency transport." They're covering the helicopter portion but flatly denying the ground ambulance.

I was literally unconscious. The paramedics made the call. I didn't exactly have the ability to Uber myself to the helicopter pad.

I've filed a formal appeal and sent in everything — the incident report, the paramedic notes, my ER records — and they came back with another denial. Same boilerplate language.

Has anyone successfully fought something like this? Is there a magic phrase you have to use in the appeal? I'm so exhausted from recovery on top of dealing with this. Feels like they're just betting I'll give up.

Also — the at-fault driver had insurance. Does that change anything here? Can I go after their policy for these bills instead?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 18
    mellow-stoat-339

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this while you're still trying to heal. It shouldn't be this hard. Is there anyone who can help you manage the paperwork side of things? A family member, a patient advocate at the hospital where you were treated? A lot of hospitals have financial advocates on staff who are really good at dealing with exactly this kind of insurance dispute.

  • 14
    quiet-swan-765

    They are 100% counting on you being too tired and overwhelmed to keep fighting. That's the whole strategy. Deny first, see who pushes back. Most people don't. Keep every single piece of paper and document every phone call — date, time, name of whoever you spoke to. You're going to need that paper trail.

    • 6
      hopeful-commuter314

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 14
    cool-heron-748

    Two things: talk to a personal injury lawyer about the at-fault driver's insurance — that bill may not be yours to fight at all if they're liable. And if you're still fighting your health insurer, escalate to your state insurance commissioner in writing. Don't just call. A written complaint gets logged and that matters.

    • 7
      quiet-wanderer201

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 13
    daring-otter-345

    Oh man, this is almost exactly what happened to me after my accident two years ago. Insurance denied part of my transport too, called it 'not medically justified' even though the ER docs said I absolutely needed it. What finally worked for me was getting my treating physician to write a letter of medical necessity specifically addressing their denial language point by point. Like, directly quoting their denial letter and rebutting each reason. It's tedious but it changed the outcome for me. Don't give up on the appeal process yet.

  • 11
    silent-kestrel-817

    I used to work on the claims side and honestly, these transport denials are almost automatic on the first pass — the system flags them and a lot of times nobody's actually reading the clinical notes carefully. When you escalate to a formal appeal and attach detailed paramedic run sheets alongside ER admission records, a human clinical reviewer actually has to look at it. That's a very different outcome than the initial automated denial. Also ask specifically for an external independent review if your state requires insurers to offer one — that's a separate set of eyes outside the insurance company entirely.

  • 9
    swift-tern-549

    The idea that a ground ambulance to a landing zone isn't 'medically necessary' when the patient needed air transport is medically absurd. You can't just teleport to a helicopter. The ground transport is literally part of the same emergency episode of care. Push back hard and make sure your medical records clearly document the clinical decision-making — why air transport was chosen, what your condition was on scene. That narrative in your records is your strongest evidence.

    • 3
      hopeful-survivor317

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 8
    sharp-seal-261

    Not legal advice, but worth knowing: if the other driver was at fault, their liability policy can potentially cover your medical bills, including transport costs their carrier denied. That's completely separate from your own health insurance fight. The two tracks can run at the same time. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand what you're actually entitled to pursue here.

    • 6
      soft-spoken-sidewalk299

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 8
    calm-marten-430

    A couple of practical things — first, check if your state has an insurance commissioner complaint process. Filing a complaint doesn't guarantee anything but it creates an official record and sometimes insurers respond very differently once there's a regulatory eye on the claim. Second, look at whether your health plan is fully-insured (state regulated) or self-funded (federally regulated under ERISA) because that changes which rules apply to your appeal rights. Your HR department or plan documents can tell you which one you have.