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Information on Insurance Reimbursement
What is a "covered service"?
Many insurance companies include "speech therapy"
under their covered services. Unfortunately, access to that
coverage is often quite restricted. Most companies include the
clause "when medically necessary to restore speech
functioning following illness or injury." This clause
negatively impacts most of our patients.
These clauses are usually interpreted by the insurance
companies to be speech/language/voice loss following head injury,
stroke, vocal surgery or radiation, etc. They almost always
specifically disinclude "developmental" speech-language
disorders, or "habilitative" treatment.
"Habilitative" treatment means that the speech/language
capability was never complete, so the treatment is not
"rehabilitative or restorative." This of course would
then disinclude all "learning disabilities",
developmental (i.e. from childhood) stuttering, and even some
voice disorders of uncertain etiology.
Even if your insurance company has given you the information
over the phone that you or your child will be covered for speech
therapy, they may reject your claim once you have submitted it
due to the specific diagnosis. Unfortunately, this is common
practice.
Requesting Pre-authorization of an Evaluation
Still, submitting the claim to the insurance company is
worthwhile. It is best, however, to ask for pre-authorization of
any services, but be aware that it can take many weeks before
your insurance company will respond to such a request.
If you wish to have the evaluation covered, you should get a
statement from your physician (or your child's pediatrician)
stating that he/she is "referring" you for "an
evaluation of [the speech/language/voice disorder]". You
should send this to your insurance company together with your
letter requesting "pre-authorization" of the evaluation
at this clinic. If the insurance company agrees to pay for all or
part of the evaluation, they will generally send us a fax to
confirm that. Some companies will send the authorization to the
patient.
Requesting Pre-authorization of Treatment
When we have completed the evaluation, we will send you a full
report, and, if we are recommending therapy, a treatment plan.
You will also receive our statement for the evaluation fee,
containing the diagnosis code and the procedure codes. You should
then have your physician sign the treatment plan, and submit the
following to your insurance company:
- Your statement
- The treatment plan (signed by your physician)
- A copy of the physician's referral
- Where applicable, your insurance company's medical claims
form. Be sure that you have entered all the requested
information, and that you have asked that the reimbursement be
sent to you, not the provider. (We do not accept direct payment
from insurance companies.)
It is best if we fill out the "Provider Section" of
this form.
Send the above to your insurance company with a cover letter
requesting a "predetermination of benefits". The
company is required by law to respond within 14 days and tell you
whether or not they plan to cover the services described under
the Treatment Plan.
If You Receive a Rejection Notice
If the company rejects your claim, they must give you specific
reasons. If speech therapy is specifically excluded from your
plan, then this is a final rejection. As we initially pointed
out, most commonly, speech therapy is included, but only for the
results of "medical conditions". Sometimes, based on
the nature of the rejection, we can prepare a letter to the
medical claims examiner, explain the nature of the disorder, and
the rejection will be overturned. Please be aware that this is
becoming less and less likely. In today's health care climate,
ancillary services are the first to be cut back.
How Much Will Be Reimbursed?
A question often asked by patients is: "How much of the
cost of therapy will my insurance cover?" Some companies
cover 50%, others will reimburse up to 85% of whatever fee the
insurance company has deemed "reasonable and
appropriate". This is hardly ever the actual cost of the
treatment, nor does it in general reflect the average cost of
treatment in your geographical region. It may, in fact, be less
than half the fee, so that the 80% is actually only 20% of the
actual fee.
It is also important to remember that there may be special
considerations on your policy, for example: the first visit to a
provider may be excluded from payment, or a policy may reimburse
only for a specific number of treatment sessions (usually in this
case, it is required that a progress report be submitted and
further therapy be approved.) Some policies have a yearly limit
on services.
When to Submit Statements
Once the company has agreed to reimburse you for the cost of
your therapy, you should send in your receipts on a regular basis
(most companies do not require that you fill out a new
medical claims form each time you submit a statement for the same
provider), rather than letting statements accumulate and sending
them all in at one time.
How Can We Help?
We will provide appropriate documentation in the form of
itemized bills with accurate diagnosis and procedural codes which
will be recognized by your insurance company's computer system.
We provide a complete, accurate evaluation report and a clear
treatment plan which includes the recommended frequency and
duration of treatment (required by insurance companies.) If you
or your child are in treatment, we will provide reports
documenting progress at the intervals required by your health
insurance carrier.
However, we can only help you receive reimbursement if you
follow your company's procedures carefully.
Annandale Fluency Clinic does not accept direct insurance
reimbursement. Patients must pay for services at the time they
are rendered, even if it is expected that a third-party will
cover some portion of the cost. AFC is not a Medicare/Medicaid
provider.
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