When a Hospital Stay or Treatment Is Denied: What It Means—and What You Can Do

Hearing that a hospital stay, treatment, or admission to a facility has been denied by insurance can feel abrupt and overwhelming—especially when you or your loved one still needs care.

But here’s the key point:
👉 A denial is not always final—and it does not always reflect the full clinical picture.

Understanding why denials happen—and how to respond—can make a critical difference in outcomes.

 

What Does a Denial Actually Mean?

When insurance denies a service, they are saying:

“Based on your plan criteria, this service is not approved at this time.”

This decision is based on:

  • Plan rules
  • Clinical guidelines
  • Documentation submitted at the time of review

👉 It does not always mean the care isn’t needed
👉 It often means more information or justification is required

 

Common Reasons for Hospital or Treatment Denials

Understanding these helps you respond strategically—not reactively.

 

  1. Medical Necessity Not Met

Insurance companies use their own criteria to determine if care is “medically necessary.”

  • Your physician may recommend continued stay
  • But insurance requires specific clinical indicators to approve it

 

  1. Level of Care Denial

This is one of the most common scenarios.

Insurance may determine:

  • The patient no longer meets criteria for inpatient care
  • A lower level of care is more appropriate (observation, SNF, home care)

 

  1. Incomplete or Insufficient Documentation

Even when care is appropriate:

  • If documentation doesn’t clearly support the need
  • The claim may be denied

👉 In healthcare, if it’s not documented, it doesn’t exist

 

  1. Prior Authorization Issues

If required approvals were not obtained:

  • Services may be denied retroactively
  • Even if clinically appropriate

 

  1. Out-of-Network or Plan Limitations

Coverage may be reduced or denied if:

  • The facility or provider is out-of-network
  • The service is excluded under the plan

 

What You Can Do After a Denial

✔ Read the denial letter carefully (reason + deadlines)
✔ Request clarification from the insurance company
✔ Speak with your provider about additional documentation
✔ Ask about a peer-to-peer review
✔ File an appeal (expedited if needed)

👉 Many denials are overturned when properly addressed.

 

Case Scenario: How Coordinated Advocacy Changes the Outcome

Let’s walk through what this looks like in real life—and how the right support can make a difference.

 

The Situation

A patient is hospitalized following complications from surgery.

  • Weakness and mobility limitations persist
  • Not safe for discharge home
  • Care team recommends continued inpatient stay or transition to rehab

Then the family is told:

👉 “Insurance has denied further hospital days.”

 

What This Means Clinically

  • The patient may still need care
  • But insurance does not see enough documented evidence to support continued inpatient level

 

How Our Dual Advocate Model Responds

At Stepping Stone Advocacy Services, this is where our coordinated approach activates immediately.

 

Step 1: Nurse Advocate Leads Clinical Review

Our Nurse Patient Advocate:

  • Reviews the patient’s current status in detail
  • Communicates with physicians, case managers, and therapy teams
  • Identifies clinical findings that support continued care
  • Ensures documentation accurately reflects:
    • Functional limitations
    • Safety concerns
    • Ongoing medical needs

👉 Because strong documentation is the foundation of a successful appeal

 

Step 2: Insurance Advocate Is Brought In

Our Insurance/Billing Advocate joins the case.

Together, they:

  • Review the denial reason line-by-line
  • Compare it to the clinical picture
  • Identify gaps and opportunities to strengthen the case

👉 This becomes a strategy session—not just a reaction

 

Step 3: Coordinated Action Plan

Now both advocates move forward—in tandem.

 

🔵 Insurance Advocate Focus:

  • Contacts insurance for clarification
  • Initiates appeal or expedited review
  • Coordinates peer-to-peer discussion if appropriate
  • Tracks timelines and escalation

👉 Focus: Overturn the denial

 

🟠 Nurse Advocate Focus:

  • Continues working directly with hospital team
  • Supports accurate, updated documentation
  • Advocates for appropriate level of care
  • Guides safe discharge planning if needed
  • Coordinates next level of care (rehab, SNF, home health)

👉 Focus: Protect the patient’s clinical outcome

 

Why This Matters

Without coordination:

  • Appeals may lack clinical strength
  • Documentation may not reflect true patient needs
  • Discharges may be rushed or unsafe

With coordinated advocacy:

  • Clinical and financial strategies align
  • Appeals are stronger
  • Transitions are safer
  • Patients and families feel supported—not alone

 

Final Thought

A denial is not just an insurance issue—and it’s not just a clinical issue.

👉 It’s both.

And when both sides are addressed together, strategically, and in real time,
that’s when advocacy becomes powerful—and outcomes can change.

LORI IS EXTREMELY TALENTED!

What a great use of Lori’s talents!

I worked with Lori for several years during my career as an orthopedic surgeon. I know her to be not only compassionate and understanding but also a tireless advocate for what is right.

In difficult situations she was unwavering in her quest to enable me to provide the best possible care for my patients. She knows the system and how to work through it (and around it whenever necessary

LORI JUMPED RIGHT IN

If you are in need of a patient advocate, I would highly recommend Lori Schellenberg. She is extremely knowledgeable, effective, and professional. Knows when to be strong and forceful yet loving and caring with your loved one and your family. I was concerned about an elderly family member who had several severe falls, was forgetting to take medication, not eating healthy and not keeping up with housekeeping yet insistent she was fine and staying in her home. Even though Lori lived out of state she made phone calls on our behalf, made several recommendations to help us provide what our loved one needed and was an intermediary when it was necessary. Lori’s knowledge of geriatrics, continuous care/assisted living facilities, the health care system, long term care insurance and hospice is invaluable. She helped us put together a plan that provided the best and continuous care necessary for our loved one and our family. We are extremely thankful for her help and look forward to continuing to work with her as our loved one moves through the next phases of her life’s journey, thus enabling us to create loving memories.

LORI JUMPED RIGHT IN

My husband underwent nasal surgery 6 months ago, after he had a negative sleep study test and was referred to an ENT doctor due to continued fatigue and snoring.

Unfortunately, he developed two different serious infections, and we were concerned about his ongoing treatment with the ENT. In fact, we were very anxious because he wasn’t getting better but the surgeon was not clear with us as to what to do next.

When describing what was going on, Lori jumped right in, when she found out my husband was actually at the surgeon’s office at that time, and still did not understand the situation. She recommended that my husband ask to have the surgeon come back into the room, and to call her so that she could speak to the surgeon with my husband in the room. Lori was very professional and knowledgeable in her approach with his surgeon. She established a treatment plan, in a way that my husband could understand, and why this was the plan. She also discussed the “what ifs” the current treatment plan did not work. He ordered further tests to be completed prior to his next appointment, if he did not improve.

She followed up with my husband and I to make sure we understood the plan.

By advocating for my husband, Lori relieved a lot of anxiety and stress that this current medical concern was causing, and they felt more confident in the surgeon’s care.

We highly recommend Lori and Stepping Stone Advocacy Services, if you are experiencing a medical condition, and don’t know where to turn for answers. She is experienced and professional, yet able to discuss medical terms in a way that we understood.