From Yahoo/NYT:
“COVID Medical Bills Are About
to Get Bigger”
Americans will most likely pay
significantly more for COVID medical care during this new wave of cases — whether
that is a routine coronavirus test or a lengthy hospitalization. Earlier in the
pandemic, most major health insurers voluntarily waived costs associated with a
COVID treatment. Patients did not have to pay their normal copayments or
deductibles for emergency room visits or hospital stays. Most COVID tests were
free, too.
The landscape has since changed,
as the pandemic persists into its second year. Federal law still requires
insurers to cover testing at no cost to the patient when there is a medical
reason for seeking care, such as exposure to the disease or a display of
symptoms. But more of the tests sought now do not meet the definition of
“medical reason” and are instead for monitoring. And insurers are now treating
COVID more like any other disease, no longer fully covering the costs of care.
Some businesses, like Delta Air Lines, are planning to charge unvaccinated
employees higher rates for insurance, citing in part the high hospitalization
costs for COVID cases. “Insurers are confronting the question about whether the
costs of COVID treatment should fall on everyone, or just the individuals who
have chosen not to get a vaccine,” said Cynthia Cox, a vice president at the
Kaiser Family Foundation who has researched how insurers are covering COVID
treatment.
The federal rules that make
coronavirus testing free include exemptions for routine workplace and school
testing, which has become more common as students head back to the classroom and
as companies mandate regular testing for unvaccinated workers. Because insurers
are not required to cover that regular testing, some patients have already
received testing bills as high as $200 for routine screenings, according to
documents that patients have submitted to a New York Times project tracking the
costs of COVID testing and treatment. Some of the highest bills, however, will
probably involve COVID patients who need extensive hospital care now that most
insurers no longer fully cover those bills. Seventy-two percent of large health
plans are no longer making COVID treatment free for patients, a recent study
from the Kaiser Family Foundation found. This includes Blue Cross Blue Shield
of Florida, the largest health plan in a state experiencing one of the
country’s worst outbreaks. On Wednesday, Florida Blue began requiring patients
to pay their normal deductibles and copayments for COVID treatment. Toni Woods,
a spokeswoman, said the plan was now focused on encouraging vaccinations. “When
the COVID-19 pandemic began last year, we implemented several emergency
provisions to temporarily help our members,” she said in a statement. “Medical
diagnostic testing for COVID-19 as well as vaccinations continue to be
available to members at $0 cost share.” Oscar Health, which sells coverage in
Florida and 14 other states, also ended free COVID treatment this week. It
cited the widespread availability of the vaccine as a key reason. “We started
waiving cost sharing for COVID-19 treatment at the peak of the pandemic in
2020, when there were few options available for those who fell ill with the
virus,” said Jackie Khan, an Oscar spokeswoman. “We believe that the COVID
vaccine is our best way to beat this pandemic, and we are committed to covering
it and testing at $0 for our members.” The new policies generally apply to all
patients, including the vaccinated; people who get sick with a breakthrough
infection; and children under 12, who are not yet eligible for the vaccine. “If
you have a small kid who gets COVID at school and ends up at the ICU, that
family is going to now be stuck with the bill even though that patient did not
have the ability to get vaccinated,” said Dr. Kao-Ping Chua, a pediatrician at
the University of Michigan who researches COVID care costs.
The average COVID hospitalization
costs approximately $40,000, researchers have found. A lengthy hospital stay —
one that requires time in the intensive care unit, or a transfer by air
ambulance — can cost many multiples more. Most insured patients will not pay
that entire bill. They will face whatever share they owe through deductibles
and copayments. Chua and his colleagues published research this summer finding
that, among patients who had to pay a share of their COVID hospitalization, the
average costs were $3,800. “There were some patients where it was $10,000 and
others where it was $500,” he said. “It gives you some semblance of what things
will now look like without the waivers.” Surprise bills for routine COVID
testing could be smaller but more common, as schools and workplaces
increasingly rely on regular screening to prevent coronavirus from spreading.
At many workplaces, unvaccinated
workers must submit to monitoring at least weekly. Some employers, including
the federal government, plan to fully cover the costs of those tests. But
others, including some hotels and universities, will ask unvaccinated workers
to bear some or all of the testing costs. Rebecca Riley recently received a
$200 bill from a laboratory with an unfamiliar name. When she called to inquire
about the charge, she learned it was a fee for a COVID test. Her son, a high
school student, is regularly tested at his Los Angeles-area high school. “I
didn’t expect to get any bills,” she said. “I feel stupid, but I’d heard the
tests were free.” Riley contacted her insurer about the charge and it agreed to
pay the full amount. But she now worries about future surprise testing bills. “I
really feel for the families that won’t be able to pay,” she said.
^ The financial cost of Covid
aren’t widely known to many people – but they should be. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/covid-medical-bills-bigger-123920634.html
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