Design Highlights
- Senator Cantwell criticized delays in Medicare patient care caused by the WISeR program implemented by CMS.
- She highlighted specific examples of patients suffering due to prolonged wait times for necessary treatments.
- Cantwell urged for the scrapping of the program, calling it a “denial device” rather than a solution.
- Concerns were raised about AI’s role in healthcare decisions potentially harming patient care.
- The political pressure is mounting for reform or elimination of the flawed program affecting seniors’ health.
Senator Maria Cantwell didn’t hold back as she tore into HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. during a recent Senate Committee on Finance hearing. Her frustration boiled over as she addressed the glaring issues plaguing the Wasteful and Inappropriate Service Reduction (WISeR) program. Launched by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, this AI-driven initiative was supposed to streamline prior authorization for Medicare beneficiaries. Instead, it’s become a bureaucratic nightmare. Patients are waiting two to four times longer for procedures that never needed prior approval before. Talk about a mess.
Cantwell didn’t mince words. She documented the alleged harm caused to patients waiting weeks instead of days for necessary care. “What’s the point of having a Medicare system if seniors can’t even get timely treatment?” she asked, pointing to concrete examples. Many Democratic colleagues in Congress echoed her sentiments, urging CMS to scrap the program entirely. Their collective voice was loud and clear: this AI tool is functioning more like a “denial device” than a helpful assistant.
The irony? This program, meant to cut waste, is actually wasting patients’ time and potentially their health. Denials are hitting services that previously cruised through approval. It’s baffling how something intended to streamline processes has turned into a bottleneck.
Cantwell expressed her anxiety about allowing AI to make such critical healthcare decisions. “What’s next? A robot deciding who gets treatment?” Her sarcasm cut through the room like a knife. Prior authorization now applies to certain procedures that previously did not require approval, complicating the process further.
Cantwell highlighted the absurdity of AI in healthcare, questioning if we’ll soon have robots determining treatment eligibility.
Kennedy, for his part, acknowledged the unacceptable delays, admitting that the current system is flawed. He pledged to work with Cantwell to address the issues. But can we really trust that? Distinctions made between AI for research versus AI for denial are nice, but they don’t fix the immediate problems. The gaps between the program’s design and its execution are glaring. Much like insurance claims, incomplete documentation and systemic complications can significantly delay resolution and leave those in need without timely support.
With the pressure mounting, Cantwell and her allies are pushing hard for a complete overhaul, if not an outright elimination, of WISeR. The flaws in this program aren’t just implementation issues; they reflect fundamental design problems that need urgent attention.
The political stakes are high, and the implications are even higher. If the government can’t get this right, who will? The future of Medicare, and the health of seniors, hangs in the balance.







