Why Prior Authorization Matters: Protecting Your Care—and Your Wallet

You’ve scheduled a procedure. Your doctor recommends it. Everything feels like it’s moving forward.

Then you hear:
👉 “We need prior authorization.”

Or worse…
👉 “This wasn’t authorized—your insurance may not cover it.”

Prior authorization (often called prior auth) is one of the most critical—and misunderstood—steps in healthcare. And when it’s missed, the consequences can be significant.

 

What Is Prior Authorization?

Prior authorization is a requirement from your insurance company that says:

“We need to review and approve this service before it is performed.”

It applies to:

  • Imaging (MRI, CT scans)
  • Surgeries and procedures
  • Certain medications (especially specialty drugs)
  • Rehab or facility admissions

👉 Without this approval, your insurance may deny payment, even if the treatment is medically necessary.

 

Why Insurance Requires Prior Authorization

Insurance companies use prior authorization to:

  • Confirm medical necessity
  • Ensure the treatment follows clinical guidelines
  • Control costs by reviewing high-expense services

While this process is meant to create oversight, it often creates delays, confusion, and risk for patients when not handled correctly.

 

What Happens When Prior Authorization Is Missed?

This is where patients and families can be caught off guard.

Even if:

  • Your physician recommended the treatment
  • The service was appropriate
  • The outcome was successful

👉 Insurance can still deny the claim

And that can leave you responsible for:

  • Thousands of dollars in unexpected bills
  • Appeals and administrative stress
  • Delays in ongoing care

 

A Real-Life Scenario

A patient is scheduled for an outpatient MRI due to worsening back pain.

  • The physician orders the test
  • The patient assumes everything is approved
  • The MRI is completed

Weeks later, a bill arrives:

👉 $2,400 — Claim Denied (No Prior Authorization)

What happened?

  • The imaging center did not obtain prior authorization
  • Insurance required approval before the test
  • The claim was denied—even though the MRI was medically appropriate

 

Who Is Responsible for Prior Authorization?

This is one of the biggest areas of confusion.

Prior authorization may be handled by:

  • The physician’s office
  • The facility performing the service
  • Occasionally, the patient is expected to confirm

👉 But here’s the reality:
If it’s missed, the patient is often the one financially responsible

 

How to Protect Yourself

These steps can help you avoid unexpected denials:

Ask the Question Early

“Does this require prior authorization?”

Don’t assume it’s already being handled.

 

Confirm It Has Been Approved

  • Ask for confirmation
  • Request the authorization number if possible

 

Verify with Your Insurance

Call and ask:

  • “Has this service been authorized?”
  • “Is this provider in-network?”

 

Keep Documentation

  • Write down names, dates, and reference numbers
  • Save any authorization confirmations

 

What If It Was Already Missed?

If a service was performed without prior authorization:

  • Contact your provider’s office immediately
  • Ask if a retroactive authorization can be requested
  • Request medical records to support an appeal
  • File an appeal with your insurance company

👉 Some denials can still be overturned—but timing matters.

 

Where Patient Advocacy Makes a Difference

At Stepping Stone Advocacy Services, this is one of the most common—and preventable—issues we see.

We help patients and families:

  • Verify prior authorizations before care
  • Identify gaps before services are performed
  • Coordinate between providers and insurance
  • Navigate denials and appeals when issues arise

Because prior authorization isn’t just a formality—
👉 it’s a critical checkpoint that protects both your care and your finances

 

Final Thought

In today’s healthcare system, it’s not enough for a treatment to be recommended.

It must also be:
✔ Documented
✔ Approved
✔ Aligned with your insurance plan

Understanding prior authorization gives you something powerful:

👉 The ability to prevent problems before they happen

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.