Article: When your health plan won't pay
Sometimes you do everything right and your health insurer doesn't play by the rules. |
You know how it works and you followed all the steps, but your insurer has balked. Here are five ways you can prevent claims problems -- and how your employer can help. By Insure.com HMO members know the drill. Got a sore throat? See your primary care physician (PCP). Need an allergy specialist? Ask your PCP for a referral. Having a cyst surgically removed? You make sure you get your health insurer's prior approval. You understand that if you don't follow your health plan's rules, your claims won't be covered. But sometimes you do everything right and your health insurer still doesn't play by the rules. For example, you get your plan's permission for surgery. Months after the operation, you get a bill in the mail and discover that your X-rays were read by a radiologist who doesn't participate in your health provider's network of doctors. X-ray claim denied. Or, your benefits handbook says your insurer fully covers diabetic test strips. But when you go to pick them up, your pharmacist charges you the full price, saying your handbook -- the only one you've ever been given -- must be out of date. Claim denied. 5 ways to prevent claims problems When you have a group health plan through work, you're not responsible for negotiating your own health-care contract. But you can educate yourself and ask your employer plenty of questions about your group health plan. Unfortunately, the responsibility for payment of a claim falls to the consumer unless the group health contract states otherwise. Here are five steps you can take to help minimize any "claims surprises" like those outlined above.
How employers purchase health care The seeds of some of the most common claims problems are sown when employers purchase health care for their employees, according to Maria K. Todd, president and CEO of HealthPro Consulting Consortium, a private managed-care consulting firm in Aurora, Colo., and a national mediator for managed-care payer-provider disputes. Todd says most employers use health insurance brokers to whom they give a list of desired benefits. The broker, in turn, identifies insurers that offer affordable plans with those benefits. Once the employer selects an insurer, the broker hands the employer a contract to review and sign. "But the average human resources director really isn't aware he or she is being given a boilerplate contract that favors the health plan," Todd says. Written in legalese, the contract generally focuses on which benefits are included and how much they'll cost. Although this is crucial information, what is omitted from the contract is just as important. Issues for negotiation There are some health-plan rules that may be negotiated, Todd says, particularly if the employer is large enough to command real bargaining power with the insurer. Yet few employers are aware of this. Some issues that may be open for negotiation include:
But some say that such detailed negotiations are unrealistic. Richard Coorsh, spokesperson for America's Health Insurance Plans (formerly the Health Insurance Association of America), says, "In such a competitive marketplace, insurers have to compete on many different levels, including economic," he says. "But insurers also have to retain customers and, in order to do that, they have to be as responsive as possible to their customers." It's virtually impossible for insurers to negotiate every possible health plan operations scenario in their contracts with employers, Coorsh says, and these contracts may contain too many fine details that might very well impede the insurers from responding flexibly on a case-by-case basis. Besides, he adds, the insurers already have well-defined appeals procedures in place. However, appeals procedures don't prevent problems from occurring in the first place. If neither your employer nor your insurer has defined who's to blame when your health plan doesn't work the way it should, ultimately, the responsibility falls on you to pay for your treatment. |
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