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Delay in Hospital Discharge for Health Insurance Claims – Why It Happens and Whether It Will Improve Soon

For many policyholders, the moment of discharge from a hospital often becomes more stressful than the hospitalisation itself. Even when treatment is complete, patients frequently find themselves waiting for hours—sometimes the entire day—for insurers to issue the final cashless approval. This persistent delay in hospital discharge for health insurance claims continues to frustrate patients and families, despite clear IRDAI guidelines.

Recent discussions between health insurers and hospitals have once again brought this long-standing issue into focus. With both parties acknowledging the problem, there is cautious optimism that the discharge process may become smoother in the near future. Yet, understanding why these delays happen—and whether new measures will help—is essential for every insured individual.

Real-Life Cases – How Discharge Delays Impact Patients

The issue of delay in hospital discharge for health insurance claims is not just procedural—it affects patients emotionally, physically, and financially.

Case 1: A 12-Hour Wait Despite Immediate Pre-Authorisation

When 35-year-old Samarth Ranjan was admitted for typhoid with thrombocytopenia, his insurer promptly issued the pre-authorisation. But at discharge, confirming the cashless claim of ₹68,000 took more than 12 hours, with no reason provided. This unnecessary wait added distress during an already challenging time.

Case 2: A CABG Patient Incorrectly Flagged for Non-Disclosure

Mumbai resident Sanjay Subramanian faced a similar ordeal in 2022. Though his pre-authorisation was smooth, the insurer later raised a dispute claiming hypertension was a pre-existing, undisclosed condition.

The twist?
A doctor had incorrectly stated the condition as 14 years old, instead of four.

Under IRDAI rules, after five years of continuous coverage (previously eight), insurers cannot deny claims except for fraud. Ultimately, the insurer approved his full claim of ₹3 lakh—but due to the delay, he had to pay an extra day’s room rent out of pocket.

These examples underline a fundamental issue: discharge delays are not just administrative—they affect real people at vulnerable moments.

Why Does Delay in Hospital Discharge for Health Insurance Claims Happen?

While claim rejections are widely discussed, discharge delays are an equally serious pain point. Experts highlight multiple reasons:

1. Legacy IT Systems at Hospitals

Many hospitals still rely on outdated systems that cannot efficiently manage:

  • Document sharing
  • Billing processes
  • Coordination with insurers

As insurers point out, discharge takes about 3.5 hours for uninsured patients, but often five hours or more for insured ones.

2. Multiple Administrative Layers

File movement still happens physically in some hospitals:

  • Doctors’ notes
  • Nursing station updates
  • Billing checks
  • TPA/insurance desk approvals

Each step adds friction.

3. Avoidable or Excessive Insurer Queries

Insurers sometimes raise:

  • Clarifications
  • Treatment-related questions
  • Requests for updated medical details

These often arise due to misaligned expectations between hospitals and insurers.

4. Differences Between Pre-Authorisation and Final Bill

A major cause of dispute is when the:

  • Pre-authorised amount
  • Final bill amount

do not match. Even small deviations trigger additional reviews.

5. Bureaucratic Coordination Problems

Distrust and lack of synchronised processes between hospitals and insurers slow down approvals.

6. Medical Reasons (Though Less Common)

Sometimes:

  • Treatment extension
  • Additional diagnostics
  • Unforeseen complications

may cause legitimate delays.

However, most delays are administrative—not medical.

IRDAI Rules on Hospital Discharge – What Should Happen vs. What Actually Happens

To protect policyholders, IRDAI mandates:

Insurers must approve final claims within 3 hours

After receiving the discharge summary and final bill, insurers must process approvals within 3 hours.

Additional Room Rent Due to Delay Must Be Paid by Insurer

If delays occur:

  • Extra room charges
  • Extra nursing fees
  • Other incidental costs

must be paid by the insurer from shareholders’ funds, not deducted from the policyholder’s sum insured.

Immediate Release of Mortal Remains

If the patient passes away, insurers must immediately release the mortal remains—no queries, no paperwork delays.

The Ground Reality

Experts note that:

  • Insurers rarely admit delays
  • Additional costs still get added to claims
  • Sum insured gets indirectly reduced
  • Patients often stay longer than medically required

The gap between regulations and real-world implementation remains significant.

What Insurers and Hospitals Discussed at the 9 October Meeting

At the recent insurer–hospital meeting, industry stakeholders agreed on several reforms to reduce delay in hospital discharge for health insurance claims.

1. Advance Intimation of Likely Discharges

Hospitals agreed to alert insurers a day before possible discharges.
This is especially useful for:

  • Planned surgeries
  • Maternity cases
  • Scheduled procedures

2. Preliminary Bill Sharing

Hospitals may send approximate bills in advance so insurers can begin verification early.

3. Earlier Start to Claim Investigations

Insurers were urged to begin investigations:

  • At admission, or
  • Early during treatment

instead of waiting until discharge.

4. Standardised Queries & Documentation

Insurers agreed to cut down on:

  • Redundant questions
  • Excessive clarifications
  • Unnecessary paperwork

5. Common Empanelment

A unified hospital–insurer empanelment system could streamline coordination.

6. Wider Adoption of NHCX

The National Health Claims Exchange (NHCX) is expected to:

  • Enable seamless electronic data flow
  • Standardise claim submissions
  • Reduce manual processing

This is considered one of the most promising long-term solutions.

Hospitals and Insurers – The Blame Game Continues

The friction between insurers and hospitals contributes significantly to discharge delays.

Hospitals’ Complaints

Hospitals argue that insurers:

  • Raise unnecessary queries
  • Challenge doctors’ recommendations
  • Delay approvals without stating reasons

Insurers’ Complaints

Insurers allege hospitals:

  • Inflate bills
  • Add extra procedures
  • Charge higher-than-agreed tariffs
  • Delay internal coordination

In most cases, both parties are correct—in part.

This lack of trust is at the core of the delay in hospital discharge for health insurance claims.

Expert Insights – Can the Problem Really Be Solved?

Pre-authorisation Should Settle Most Questions

Experts like Mahavir Chopra (Founder, Beshak.org) argue that:

  • Once pre-authorisation is granted
  • Necessary checks are already done
  • Only 2–3 final validations should remain

Yet discrepancies between the initial estimate and final bill continue to cause friction.

Hospital File Movement Still Causes Delays

Even top hospitals require patients to move:

  • To nursing stations
  • To treating doctors
  • To billing desks
  • To insurer/TPA counters

Digitisation remains uneven.

Technology Integration Is the Real Future

Systems like NHCX offer hope:

  • Automated data sharing
  • Standardised formats
  • Faster approvals
  • Reduced paperwork

However, adoption is currently low across many hospitals and insurers.

What Can Policyholders Do If They Face Delay in Hospital Discharge?

1. Ask for Clear Timelines

Check when the discharge summary was sent to the insurer.

2. Maintain Documentation

Keep:

  • Hospital bills
  • Discharge summaries
  • Emails
  • Screenshots

3. Escalate Delays

If the insurer delays beyond 3 hours:

  • Raise a complaint with the insurer
  • Escalate to IRDAI’s Bima Bharosa
  • Approach the Insurance Ombudsman

4. Ask the Hospital for Advance Summary

For planned procedures, insist that hospitals:

  • Prepare summaries early
  • Share preliminary estimates

5. Request Insurer to Begin Verification Early

This can reduce last-minute issues.

Conclusion – Will the Discharge Process Improve?

The problem of delay in hospital discharge for health insurance claims is a result of:

  • Outdated systems
  • Administrative inefficiencies
  • Lack of trust
  • Excessive paperwork
  • Mismatch between bills and approvals

However, with insurers and hospitals finally discussing the issue openly—and with IRDAI tightening norms—there is genuine hope for improvement.

The road ahead lies in:

  • Process standardisation
  • Digital integration through NHCX
  • Advance planning
  • Better communication
  • Reduced manual intervention

If implemented earnestly, these measures can make hospital discharge much smoother, reducing stress for patients at a critical moment.

Based on recent reporting by Economic Times (ET Wealth).

 

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