Health Insurance May Not Cover Everything You Expect
Understanding your health insurance coverage can be a big challenge. This is especially true if your plan has special rules about only covering care from in-network providers or having to seek certain treatments for a condition before more drastic measures, such as surgery, can be taken.


As a patient, you have limited control over what tests and procedures your doctor orders, where you obtain those services, and what you ultimately end up paying. Even if you do your research and ask how much your health insurance policy will pay for a particular service, health insurance companies have contracts with medical professionals and generally will not discuss their pricing between themselves and the providers.
In many cases, neither your health provider nor your health insurance company can give any insight into how much you will pay. It is not unusual for a doctor to order a service, the patient to follow their doctor’s orders, and the health insurance company to pay only a small portion of the cost. The health insurance company has pre-negotiated, contracted prices and pays the contracted amount to the provider.
To be fair, in recent years, health insurance companies have made strides towards transparency. If you have an ACA-compliant plan, there are many services that your health insurance is legally required to cover, taking some of the guesswork out of budgeting for health expenses.
Reading your health insurance plan’s coverage paperwork can help you make sure that a service or medication that you are getting is covered. If you have any questions about your coverage, call your health insurance company (usually the member services phone number on the back of your insurance card), or talk to your health insurance agent.


Services Not Covered by Health Insurance
Cosmetic Procedures
Elective services that are meant to enhance your appearance, such as certain dermatological procedures and plastic surgery, are usually not covered.
Fertility Treatments
While rules vary from one state to another, most health insurance companies have very limited coverage for fertility treatments. In Nevada, health insurance companies may cover up to 6 cycles of artificial insemination per lifetime, with prior authorization approval. Check your plan’s “Evidence of Insurance” for details.
Off-Label Prescriptions
Medications are tested and approved for treating specific disorders or illnesses. In higher or lower dosages, however, they may be effective in treating other conditions. If a medication is being used to treat a condition that is not listed on its label, then the health insurance company may not cover it.
New Technology or Treatments
While there have been significant technological advances in screening and treating certain conditions, health insurance companies tend to be slow to catch up. Unless medical companies can prove that a new technology dramatically improves patients’ likelihood of surviving an illness, the health insurance company is unlikely to cover it.
Getting Help with Nevada Insurance Enrollment
It is hard to budget for health expenses when you do not know what your cost-sharing responsibility will be. At Nevada Insurance Enrollment, our health insurance agents can help you review your policy or find reliable health coverage. We can also help you understand the claims handling process and dispute denied claims.
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The Affordable Care Act / Obamacare, put specific enrollment periods in place to prevent people from only enrolling in health insurance when they were sick or needed surgery.


Are Fertility Services Covered by Health Insurance?
Even if you live in a state that requires health insurance coverage for fertility treatments, there may be certain requirements that you have to meet to have services covered. For example, if you have unexplained infertility, you might only qualify for in vitro fertilization after a period of time or a specified number of in-vitro cycles.


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While a lot of good has come from the law, there have been serious downsides as well, leaving many to wonder whether the ACA will stand the test of time or be repealed and replaced.
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