Last winter, Amber Wingler started getting a series of increasingly urgent messages from the hospital in Columbia, Missouri, letting her know her family’s health care might soon be upended.
MU Health Care, where most of her family’s doctors work, was mired in a contract dispute with Wingler’s health insurer, Anthem. The existing contract was set to expire.
Then, on March 31, Wingler received an email alerting her that the next day Anthem was dropping the hospital from its network. It left her reeling.
“I know that they go through contract negotiations all the time … but it just seemed like bureaucracy that wasn’t going to affect us. I’d never been pushed out-of-network like that before,” she said.
The timing was awful.
Wingler’s 8-year-old daughter, Cora, had been having unexplained t

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