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How to Appeal a Therapy Denial in New Hampshire

If your insurance denied therapy coverage in New Hampshire, you have more rights than they'll tell you upfront. The appeals process has two levels: internal (with the insurer) and external (with a neutral reviewer). Most denials are overturned at the external review stage.

New Hampshire snapshot
New Hampshire mental health insurance landscape

Granite Advantage. NH Medicaid Behavioral Health has strong CCBHC network.

Full parity enforcement Medicaid expanded

Step 1: Request the denial letter in writing

Every denial must be in writing with a specific reason. If you don't have one, call and request it. The letter triggers your appeal clock (typically 180 days).

Step 2: Internal appeal

Write a letter citing: the denial reason, why it's wrong (e.g. 'the denial states therapy isn't medically necessary, but my provider's notes document depression with PHQ-9 score of 18'), and what you want (coverage approved).

Step 3: External review

If internal appeal fails, request an external review within 4 months. In New Hampshire, this goes to an independent review organization (IRO). Most states' IROs overturn 40-60% of denials.

Step 4: State insurance commissioner complaint

File a parallel complaint with the New Hampshire Department of Insurance. They can levy fines for parity violations. The commissioner's office often gets faster resolution than the formal appeal.

Documentation helps

Your therapist can write a 'medical necessity' letter citing specific diagnostic criteria, treatment history, and consequences of stopping. These significantly improve appeal success rates.

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