• Home
  • Practice Focus
    • Facial Plastic/Reconstructive
    • Head and Neck
    • Laryngology
    • Otology/Neurotology
    • Pediatric
    • Rhinology
    • Sleep Medicine
    • How I Do It
    • TRIO Best Practices
  • Business of Medicine
    • Health Policy
    • Legal Matters
    • Practice Management
    • Tech Talk
    • AI
  • Literature Reviews
    • Facial Plastic/Reconstructive
    • Head and Neck
    • Laryngology
    • Otology/Neurotology
    • Pediatric
    • Rhinology
    • Sleep Medicine
  • Career
    • Medical Education
    • Professional Development
    • Resident Focus
  • ENT Perspectives
    • ENT Expressions
    • Everyday Ethics
    • From TRIO
    • The Great Debate
    • Letter From the Editor
    • Rx: Wellness
    • The Voice
    • Viewpoint
  • TRIO Resources
    • Triological Society
    • The Laryngoscope
    • Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
    • TRIO Combined Sections Meetings
    • COSM
    • Related Otolaryngology Events
  • Search

Ethical Obligations and Duty to Advocate for Patients in Prior Authorization for Surgery

by G. Richard Holt, MD, MSE, MPH, MABE, MSAM, D Bioethics • December 2, 2025

  • Tweet
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Print-Friendly Version

Clinical Scenario

You Might Also Like

  • CMS’ New Rule Aims to Streamline the Prior Authorization Process
  • Otolaryngology Practices Use Digital Tools to Pre-authorize—With Mixed Results
  • Do Prior Authorization Requests Hurt Patient Care?
  • Wound Management Following Facial Plastic Surgery
Explore This Issue
December 2025

You are seeing a four-year-old female in your pediatric otolaryngology clinic for a pre-operative visit to discuss your request to the state Medicaid/ CHIP office for prior authorization to provide surgical services on her behalf. The patient, Cindy Long, was attacked approximately one year ago by a stray dog in the neighborhood, resulting in multiple, extensive lacerations and deep bites that you repaired in the operating room. Despite diligent scar care (silicone gel massage, steroid injections, and other salutary scar treatments), she has developed a hypertrophic scar along the left upper lip and cheek that distorts her smile and limits oral competence. Additionally, there are at least 15 other unsightly and problematic scars that have caused her to be teased and ridiculed at school. In last month’s evaluation, you noted no further significant improvement on medical treatment and advised the parents on the next recommended step, which would be a course of longitudinal scar revisions over a longer time frame. They concurred and wished to move ahead with the surgery.

In your letter of request for a surgical coverage authorization, you fully identified the impacts of the scars on her quality of life and detailed the reconstructive surgery that would be required, including high-quality photographs. You commented on the functional impairments and the psychosocial harm she has experienced over the past year of healing. The formal request for prior authorization was approved for the left upper lip scar but denied for all of the remaining scars. Denial was based on the payer’s statement that “cosmetic surgery for scarring” is not covered, unless determined by the reviewer to be medically necessary, which the reviewer felt it was not. You filed an appeal for a higher review, with additional documentation, but the denial was upheld. You finally were able to have a telephone conversation with a physician reviewer, but he was a retired adult neurologist and would not be convinced. You explain to Cindy and her parents that Medicaid would authorize the functional scar revision, but not for the disfiguring scars.

Cindy’s parents are obviously quite disappointed and very distraught. Cindy cannot understand, and states, “I want my face to look like a normal girl again.” How can you further advocate for Cindy as an ethical responsibility and professional duty?

Discussion

In one form or another, we have all been faced with what we feel to be incorrect prior authorization determinations, and understand how frustrating it is for the patient, family, and otolaryngologist. One can actually “personalize” the situation, where we empathize with them, owing to substituted empathy, particularly if we have children or grandchildren of our own—it can just hit home.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 | Single Page

Filed Under: ENT Perspectives, Everyday Ethics, Home Slider Tagged With: Patient AdvocacyIssue: December 2025

You Might Also Like:

  • CMS’ New Rule Aims to Streamline the Prior Authorization Process
  • Otolaryngology Practices Use Digital Tools to Pre-authorize—With Mixed Results
  • Do Prior Authorization Requests Hurt Patient Care?
  • Wound Management Following Facial Plastic Surgery

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

The Triological SocietyENTtoday is a publication of The Triological Society.

Polls

Has experience as a patient influenced your professional development or demeanor?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...
  • Polls Archive

Top Articles for Residents

  • A Resident’s View of AI in Otolaryngology
  • Call for Resident Bowl Questions
  • Resident Pearls: Pediatric Otolaryngologists Share Tips for Safer, Smarter Tonsillectomies
  • A Letter to My Younger Self: Making Deliberate Changes Can Help Improve the Sense of Belonging
  • ENTtoday Welcomes Resident Editorial Board Members
  • Popular this Week
  • Most Popular
  • Most Recent
    • The Path to Department Chair: Arriving and Thriving

    • How Audiologists and Researchers Are Shaping Military Hearing Health Practices

    • Office Laryngoscopy Is Not Aerosol Generating When Evaluated by Optical Particle Sizer

    • Rewriting the Rules of Rhinosinusitis

    • Top 10 LARY and LIO Articles of 2024

    • The Dramatic Rise in Tongue Tie and Lip Tie Treatment

    • Rating Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Severity: How Do Two Common Instruments Compare?

    • Is Middle Ear Pressure Affected by Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Use?

    • Otolaryngologists Are Still Debating the Effectiveness of Tongue Tie Treatment

    • Keeping Watch for Skin Cancers on the Head and Neck

    • Why So Loud? Rethinking the Volume of Our Everyday Experiences
    • How Audiologists and Researchers Are Shaping Military Hearing Health Practices
    • A Case for Endoscopic Surgery: How Personal Experience Influenced Pursuit of a New Skill
    • The Path to Department Chair: Arriving and Thriving
    • Rewriting the Rules of Rhinosinusitis

Follow Us

  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • The Triological Society
  • The Laryngoscope
  • Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookies

Wiley

Copyright © 2026 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies. ISSN 1559-4939