Health insurance
companies are beginning to cover co-payments and related out-of-pocket costs to
include visits to doctor’s offices for screening for the Coronavirus strain
COVID-19.
It’s the latest
wave by health plans to eliminate potential bureaucratic hurdles including fees
to accessing diagnostic tests amid a U.S. health crisis as testing ramps up at sites across the country for
patients who may be infected with the Coronavirus strain COVID-19.
But health
insurers aren’t covering the health plan enrollee
out-of-pocket share of the treatment as was suggested earlier this week by the
White House. Treatments are generally covered but deductibles, co-pays and
related cost-sharing remains.
Cigna Friday said it is waiving “customer cost-sharing
for office visits related to COVID-19 testing through May 31.” Other health
plans are also taking additional measures to waive fees for diagnostic testing
for COVID-19 or allowing for access to virtual physician or other medical
care provider consultation via telehealth.
“We are
relentlessly focused on keeping our customers and communities safe,” Cigna
president and chief executive officer David Cordani said. “We are taking all
precautionary safety measures and making it easier for our customers to protect
themselves against COVID-19 by accessing medical care virtually, over the
phone, or in person.”
Health plan coverage varies from insurer to
insurer so customers are encouraged to visit company websites or review
policies, particularly if they have employer-sponsored coverage. Depending on
the health plan, insurers or employers may require the doctor to be in the
health plan network or have a preferred location for testing or evaluation in a
particular physician group or office.
A controversy erupted earlier this week when President Trump suggested health
insurers would be covering the entire cost of treatment for coronavirus, but
that’s generally not the case.
Insurers are
generally covering health plan enrollee’s share of preventative diagnostic
testing, telehealth consultations and, lately, visits to their doctor’s office
as the Cigna announcement described Friday. For example, UnitedHealth Group’s
UnitedHealthcare health insurance unit last week waived “all diagnostic test
cost-sharing for insured members.”
America’s Health
Insurance Plans (AHIP), the trade and lobby for health insurers, has a running tally of company responses to the
coronavirus that includes links to company announcements and related
information. AHIP represents some of the biggest health insurers in the country
including CVS Health and its Aetna health insurance unit, Cigna, Anthem, Centene
and many Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans.
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