A New York father posted a piece of mail from UnitedHealthcare online that has left plenty of people frustrated and confused. The insurance company apparently sent a formal letter denying coverage for a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) stay. The letter was addressed directly to one of the couple’s newborn twin daughters “Baby Girl Twin A,” rather than to her parents.
The story came to light after comedian Blake Wexler shared the experience, posting a video on his TikTok account and a separate post on his Instagram. As found by The Nerd Stash, Wexler pointed out how strange it is for a large insurance provider to send a denial letter to a baby who had only just been born and was receiving care in the NICU.
In the video, Wexler jokes about the logistics of the situation and questions whether the company expected his wife to deliver the mail to the infant while she was still in the womb.
Broader debate reignited over US healthcare bureaucracy
The letter opened with the greeting “Dear Baby Girl Twin A.” Some commenters pointed out that, hospitals commonly use temporary placeholders like ‘Baby Girl’ or ‘Baby Boy’ on medical records before a child’s name is finalized.
The story spread to other platforms, including Reddit, where it gathered thousands of reactions from people who were as confused as the family involved. One user explained the likely cause, writing, “Most plans will extend the mother’s coverage to the newborn for 30 days until the baby’s coverage can be established and then retroactively dated to their birth.”
This is not the only time an insurer has been criticized for denying coverage to a newborn, with another case in which a newborn was reportedly denied needed care.
Other people in the conversation shared their own experiences with insurance denials and the broader difficulty of dealing with coverage in the United States. Many of these commenters claimed they were healthcare workers or people who had worked in billing, and they said that this kind of administrative failure happens often.
The conversation appears to grow into a larger debate about why essential medical services for newborns become tied up in complex insurance disputes. The case adds to a string of viral moments in which customers have publicly challenged denied insurance claims.
Published: Jun 4, 2026 12:30 pm