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The CEO is ultimately responsible for the actions of the company. That's literally their job. They set policy, direction and strategy, and if we're to listen to what CEOs say they do,they also set the tone, attitude and energy of the company.
So unless the denials that resulted in death were done in opposition to corporate policy, the CEO is responsible for them.
Additionally, there was literally nothing stopping him from pushing a company policy of, as a thought, approving all claims involving minors, changing approval standards to only deny when the treatment was unequivocally unnecessary after a verbal consultation between the patients doctor and the insurance review doctor, and moving the balance of claim review to fraud investigation to recoup money after instead of denying upfront.
He's only been there since 2021. These policies don't show up overnight. How do you know he wasn't working to change these policies?
Being in charge since 2021 means he got to decide at least some policies during the pandemic, which arguably could've caused even more harm if he wanted to deny a portion of claims solely to keep shareholders happy
First, because I'm not naive and know that CEOs don't get large bonuses and stock grants for doing stuff like that, particularly not in the US health insurance industry.
Second, we know that since he started there they began programs like using AI in a fashion that had a preposterously high denial rate, and actively hurt elderly people.
this case, and others like it continued to happen during his tenure.
Finally, a company wouldn't do a program like that without mentioning it, since it would clearly make them a more appealing insurer.
Even if he didn't put the policies in place, he's still responsible for the conduct of the company under his supervision, and there's no indication he did anything other than act like what you would expect from an insurance company CEO. Maximizing profits by denying healthcare.