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When is Preventative Care not Preventative? Let’s get Labcorp to join in!

by Beautiful Club   ·  4 months ago  
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Health Policy

By MATTHEW HOLT

The Lab Bill Conundrum: A ​Personal Experiance with Blue Shield and Labcorp

I recently encountered a perplexing situation ⁤involving a $34.94 charge for lab tests ​from Blue ⁤Shield of California and Brown &⁢ Toland ‌Physicians IPA. This fee should ‌either be ‍covered as⁣ preventive care under the Affordable ​Care Act‌ (ACA) or subject to a co-pay of ‌$50, as indicated ⁢in the screenshot I obtained from Blue Shield.

I decided to reach out to Labcorp ⁤for clarification. Though, my experience was⁢ frustrating; ‌after‌ six minutes on ⁢hold, I spoke with an agent who seemed quite confused about my inquiry. Notably, ‌ther is ⁣no straightforward way to communicate through⁤ thier website, and entering an invoice number into their automated system does not connect ⁢you with a representative. The only option is to hang up and start⁢ over without entering ⁤your invoice number—then wait again on hold while listening to music.

Once ⁢connected with a‍ human operator in the⁤ Philippines,I explained that I needed details ‌regarding which⁢ specific test ⁤was not covered by the ACA guidelines. According to‍ the Explanation of Benefits⁣ (EOB) provided by brown & Toland/Blue Shield, it stated that my⁤ co-pay was $0.

The representative informed me⁢ that⁣ out ‍of five tests performed (each associated with its CPT code), three where deemed non-covered services: Lipid‌ panel (CPT 85027 ‍- $107.10), A1C test (CPT 80061 – $81.90),and Uric Acid test (CPT 84550 -‍ $43.05). It’s worth‍ noting that two of these tests should be covered under ACA provisions; though, based on my‌ research regarding CMS guidelines, there might potentially ‍be ambiguity surrounding the Uric Acid test’s coverage status.

Around fifteen ‌minutes into our conversation, unexpectedly—perhaps ​due to disconnection—the call ended abruptly without any follow-up from⁢ them ​despite having provided my phone number.

Navigating consumer transparency Challenges

The next ⁣step​ involves⁢ sending ⁣an email along with a⁤ screenshot of the‌ EOB issued by the IPA rather than directly from Blue shield itself; I’m anticipating ​feedback within three-to-five business days.

Your curiosity must be piqued! Let’s see how this unfolds; however, it’s‌ disheartening how lacking⁤ transparency is within consumer healthcare interactions—a reality that starkly contrasts ‍what industry leaders like Paul markovich advocate during public discussions.

Matthew Holt is⁣ the founder and publisher of THCB