New Books in Political Science

Miranda Yaver, "Coverage Denied: How Health Insurers Drive Inequality in the United States" (Cambridge UP, 2026)

Apr 30, 2026
Miranda Yaver, political scientist and health policy researcher, studies how insurer practices shape who gets care. She discusses prior authorization, claim denials, and how appeals processes create unequal burdens. Conversation covers insurer incentives, impacts on clinicians and communities, and policy reforms to reduce administrative harm.
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ANECDOTE

Personal Denial Experience Sparked Research

  • Miranda Yavar landed on this book topic after personally facing repeated denials with a new insurer while doing a postdoc in health policy.
  • Her on-hold, emotional experience made her ask who without her resources could navigate denials and inspired the research focus.
INSIGHT

Prior Authorization Became A Default Gatekeeper

  • Prior authorization evolved from narrow utilization checks into a sprawling gatekeeping tool across imaging, procedures, and many drugs.
  • Managed care growth and profit-driven insurers expanded pre-approval powers, mixing cost containment with shareholder incentives.
ADVICE

Reduce Information Gaps To Increase Appeals

  • Survey and explain appeals data to reduce informational barriers: many people don't appeal because they think they'll lose or don't know they can appeal.
  • Miranda surveyed 1,340 adults and found misperceptions of appeal success and cited lack of understanding as main reasons not to pursue appeals.
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