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Humana × Residential and level-of-care

How to appeal your Humana residential and level-of-care denial

Behavioral health and substance-use disorder denials often turn on level-of-care decisions, residential vs. This guide is specific to Humana appeals.

Why Humana denies residential and level-of-care

Humana is among the top three Medicare Advantage carriers and also operates Tricare and a smaller commercial book. Medicare Advantage prior auth is the highest-volume denial category.

For residential and level-of-care specifically: Behavioral health and substance-use disorder denials often turn on level-of-care decisions, residential vs. partial hospitalization vs. intensive outpatient. Carriers frequently deny residential placement using internal criteria that have been ruled inadequate in landmark litigation, including Wit v. United Behavioral Health.

The law that controls this appeal

Generally accepted standards of care (ASAM Criteria, LOCUS/CALOCUS) plus MHPAEA parity control level-of-care determinations.

What Humana denies for residential and level-of-care

The residential and level-of-care services most often denied:

  • Residential mental health treatment
  • Residential substance-use disorder treatment
  • Eating disorder residential and partial hospitalization
  • Adolescent residential placement
  • Extended inpatient psychiatric stays

Why residential and level-of-care claims get denied

A typical Humana residential and level-of-care denial almost always cites one of these reasons. Each one maps to a specific rebuttal in the appeal:

  • Plan claims a lower level of care is appropriate
  • Plan applies internal criteria inconsistent with generally accepted standards
  • Plan requires demonstrated failure at lower level of care
  • Documentation of acute risk insufficient per plan criteria

The Humana appeal process

Appeal levels: Medicare Advantage federal 5-level ladder. Commercial: internal then external review.

Carrier timing: Medicare Advantage: 60 days between each level. Commercial: 180 days from denial for internal, 60 days for external.

Level of care timing: Urgent: 72 hours. Standard internal appeal: 30 days. External review: 4 months from final internal denial. For active treatment denials, request expedited review.

What we know about Humana: Humana cases benefit most from level-2 (Maximus) escalation. We don't stop at level 1.

Common Humana denial patterns for residential and level-of-care

  • Five-level Medicare appeal process. Humana Medicare Advantage denials enter the federal appeal ladder: plan reconsideration → IRE (Maximus) → ALJ → Medicare Appeals Council → federal court. Federal data show Medicare Advantage plans overturn a large share of denials once they are appealed, yet very few members appeal; reversal odds stay meaningful through the IRE and ALJ levels.
  • DME (durable medical equipment) denials. Humana DME denials often cite missing home-evaluation documentation. Re-filing with the home-evaluation packet attached is the most common reversal path.
  • Skilled nursing and post-acute care. Humana has been the subject of CMS audits on early termination of skilled nursing coverage. Appeals citing CMS coverage manual standards have a documented success record.

How to win your Humana residential and level-of-care appeal

Strategy for residential and level-of-care: Cite generally accepted standards of care, ASAM Criteria for SUD, LOCUS / CALOCUS for MH, APA practice guidelines. Reference Wit v. United Behavioral Health for the principle that plans must use criteria consistent with generally accepted standards, not internally restrictive ones. Pair with a federal MHPAEA parity argument. Document acute risk factors (suicidality, self-harm history, prior treatment failures) precisely.

Filed against Humana, that strategy rides on this procedural spine:

  1. Procedural-rights anchor. Every Humana denial triggers ERISA § 503 or 45 C.F.R. § 147.136 procedural rights. The cover letter invokes these in the opening paragraph to lock the timeline and force criteria disclosure.
  2. Criteria-disclosure demand. Humana frequently denies on "not medically necessary" without disclosing the clinical criteria applied. Once disclosed, those criteria become the rebuttal map.
  3. Controlling-standard citation. Generally accepted standards of care (ASAM Criteria, LOCUS/CALOCUS) plus MHPAEA parity control level-of-care determinations.
  4. Treating-provider attestation. A letter from the treating physician addressing each criterion in Humana's own policy language. This is the single strongest evidentiary element.
  5. Requested action. A specific demand to reverse the residential and level-of-care denial and approve the service, not a general "please reconsider."

Documents you'll need for your Humana residential and level-of-care appeal

  • Denial letter and plan's level-of-care criteria
  • Treating clinician's clinical assessment
  • ASAM / LOCUS / CALOCUS scoring (where applicable)
  • Documentation of prior treatment attempts and outcomes
  • Acute risk documentation

What a residential and level-of-care appeal can recover

Typical recovery for residential and level-of-care cases runs $5,000 - $150,000+ per episode of care. The exact figure depends on the specific service and your plan's contracted rates.

Humana residential and level-of-care appeals: frequently asked questions

Can I appeal your Humana residential treatment denial?

Yes. Level-of-care denials frequently rely on internal criteria that courts have found inadequate. Cite generally accepted standards of care and pair the clinical argument with a federal parity (MHPAEA) challenge.

What standards should I cite for level of care?

Generally accepted standards: the ASAM Criteria for substance-use disorders and LOCUS or CALOCUS for mental health. The principle is that Humana must use criteria consistent with these standards, not internally restrictive ones.

Why was residential downgraded to outpatient?

Plans commonly claim a lower level of care is appropriate or require demonstrated failure at a lower level first. Documenting acute risk factors such as suicidality, self-harm history, and prior treatment failures rebuts that directly.

How fast can a level-of-care appeal move?

For active treatment, request expedited review, which is decided within 72 hours. Standard internal appeals take up to 30 days and external review is available within about 4 months of the final internal denial.

What Apellica does for Humana residential and level-of-care appeals

We file appeals against Humana specifically configured to its internal review process. Every residential and level-of-care appeal embeds the criteria-disclosure demand, the procedural-rights anchor, the controlling-standard citation above, treating-provider attestation language, and the peer-reviewed evidence relevant to the denied service.

Cost: $0 upfront. We work on contingency for Humana appeals, if the appeal succeeds, we collect a percentage of the recovered claim value. If it fails, you owe nothing.

Start your Humana residential and level-of-care appeal

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Related Humana guides

Residential and level-of-care guides for other carriers

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