How to determine if your insurance covers
Acupuncture?
Insurance is a wonderful thing, especially when
your insurance provides acupuncture benefits. However determining
what you need to ask your insurance company can be a little
difficult as many insurance companies don't understand acupuncture
and even fewer patients know what to expect.
The following represents some of the questions that
you can ask your insurance company when determining your benefits.
The information provided is unofficial. This is just stuff that I've
found while in practice, working with insurance companies. Insurance
is regulated on a state level in the USA and if you are not in
California, you may find some of these items to be a bit different
for you.
Step One: Call your insurance company's consumer or benefits
line. This number will likely be found on your membership card.
Inquire about your acupuncture benefits.
If you don't have benefits, you may have what's
called an "affinity program". This
is basically saying that if you pick an acupuncturist off of one of
their lists, you can get your treatments at a discounted price. The
discount will vary from plan to plan.
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Step Two: If you
have benefits, you'll also want to know the following:
How many treatments do I get?
-
best answer:
unlimited. This is going to mean that you can get three
treatments per week for as long as necessary. By the time you
start thinking about acupuncture, you've probably been through a
great many different treatments and this is your last resort (or
at least your most recent resort). The reason that this matters is
that for every year that you've had a problem, expect one month to
fix it.
Insurance companies that provide unlimited
benefits will periodically stop paying for them to force the
acupuncturist to write up a letter of medical necessity which
pretty much lays out what's wrong, how we're fixing it, and how
much longer we think it'll take. This is fair and reasonable on
the part of the insurance company to do this. Whether or not they
do it well (as in responding when you've faxed in what they
requested, etc.) is a whole different story.
-
good answer: 35 per
year. This too is going to get the job done in many
cases. Generally acute conditions (meaning that they're really
intense, but don't last that long or came on quickly) are going to
respond better than the low-grade long-term chronic issues. Still,
even for the chronic issues, 35 treatments inside of a year should
be a pretty good start.
-
another good answer: 12 to
18 per quarter. Still okay, see above.
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Does this number also
include any other therapies?
-
best answer: no, this is only
about acupuncture
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not the best answer: The use of chiropractic, physical therapy,
or other therapy is also be counted on your benefits. Sometimes
that acupuncture benefit for 35 per year is shared by all these
different modalities. You'll want to find that out too, especially
if you're getting chiropractic care,
etc.
What's my deductible?
If your acupuncturist turns in a claim,
but you haven't met your deductible, your insurance company will
not pay your acupuncturist and you will be liable for that unpaid
portion. The amount that your insurance company would have paid
your acupuncturist will however be applied to your deductible
paid, so you'll at least get credit for that amount. Still, there
may be some discrepancy between what you pay and what they'll
apply to your deductible. You might want to ask about that too.
For instance, I charge $70 for a treatment, but perhaps the
insurance company only pays $25. That means that I will bill you
for the remaining $45. If you haven't yet met your deductible,
I'll bill you for that unpaid $25 as well. The insurance company
will apply only $25 (their normal pay-out rate) to your
deductible. To my knowledge (and I could easily be wrong on this
one) they'll only apply the $25 to your deductible, not what I
actually charged you.
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best answer:
Your deductible for this time period in question (usually the
calendar year) has been met, and the coverage for your acupuncture
treatments has begun.
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not the best
answer: You still owe $$$ on your annual deductible, so the
acupuncture will be completely out of your pocket.
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a really bad
answer: You still owe $$$ on your annual deductible, AND
your car is parked in the street cleaning area and so you just got
a ticket.
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