The moral injury of “not medically necessary” denials
The first denial arrived not with cruelty or malice, but with a phrase so familiar it barely registers as language anymore: “not medically necessary.” The cancer drug, recommended by oncologists and supported by evidence and standard of care, was rejected. No phone call. No physician-to-physician conversation. Just an automated letter and a bureaucratic pause inserted into a life that no longer had room for delay.
The family appealed. They fought. They …
The moral injury of “not medically necessary” denials


















