David Wit, et al v. United Behavioral Health

  1. June 11, 2024

    Pivotal ERISA Case Stalls Amid Mental Health Crisis

    A nationwide mental health crisis has emerged while a landmark case involving thousands of insurance claims denied by United Behavioral Health has wound its way through the courts. The dispute is hitting new headwinds at the Ninth Circuit.

  2. May 20, 2024

    Patients Urge 9th Circ. To Deny UBH Petition In Claim Fight

    Patients alleging United Behavioral Health mismanaged their mental health and substance use disorder treatment claims urged the Ninth Circuit not to grant the insurance company's petition for appellate court intervention in the consolidated action, arguing the effort was inappropriate and unjustified.

  3. December 08, 2023

    5 Recent ERISA Decisions Attorneys Should Know

    Appellate courts issued a bevy of important decisions applying federal benefits law in 2023, including a recent Second Circuit ruling in favor of Cornell University that deepened a circuit split and a Tenth Circuit finding that an Oklahoma law regulating pharmacy benefit managers was preempted. Here, Law360 looks back at five published circuit court decisions in ERISA litigation from the second half of 2023 that benefits lawyers should know.

  4. August 25, 2023

    9th Circ. Reopens Door To Reprocessing In UBH Battle

    The Ninth Circuit's third version of its ruling in a consolidated class action pitting United Behavioral Health against patients challenging coverage denials largely came out in UBH's favor, but it reopened the door for health plan participants to demand claim reprocessing on a class basis, experts say.

  5. August 22, 2023

    9th Circ. Sends Lower Court ERISA Query In Updated Opinion

    The Ninth Circuit on Tuesday granted a panel rehearing in litigation brought by United Behavioral Health plan participants fighting the denial of claims and instructed a district court to resolve a threshold question over the plans' administrative exhaustion requirement.

  6. June 14, 2023

    5 Important Benefits Rulings From The 1st Half Of 2023

    A Texas federal court ruled against Affordable Care Act preventive care coverage mandates, the Seventh Circuit revived a retirement plan mismanagement case brought by Northwestern University workers and the Tenth Circuit refused to force arbitration of an employee stock ownership plan lawsuit. Here are five rulings from the first six months of 2023 that benefits lawyers should have on their radar.

  7. March 21, 2023

    DOL Leads Chorus Asking Full 9th Circ. To Tackle UBH Case

    The U.S. Department of Labor urged the full Ninth Circuit to rehear an appeal in a federal benefits lawsuit against United Behavioral Health, joining a coalition of medical associations, health advocates and attorneys general from 15 states and the District of Columbia in calling for rehearing en banc.

  8. March 10, 2023

    Full 9th Circ. Asked To Review ERISA Reprocessing Appeal

    Thousands of participants in health plans administered by United Behavioral Health who sought reprocessing of 67,000 claims for mental health and substance use disorder treatment urged the full Ninth Circuit on Friday to reconsider a three-judge panel's decision, warning of "dire nationwide consequences" absent rehearing.

  9. January 26, 2023

    9th Circ. Rules UBH Doesn't Have To Reprocess 67,000 Claims

    The Ninth Circuit held Thursday that United Behavioral Health doesn't have to reprocess some 67,000 claims for mental health and substance use disorder treatments from participants in employee health plans who alleged the denials violated federal benefits laws, finding UBH didn't abuse its discretion in interpreting workers' plans.

  10. September 23, 2022

    5 Parity Cases Benefits Lawyers Should Watch

    A group of lawsuits percolating up through the courts from patients who say insurers violated federal law by skimping on coverage for mental health and substance use disorder treatments will shed light on what such cases need to survive and what remedies plaintiffs can win, attorneys say.