Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Having GRS since the new healthcare laws


Guest Lizzie McTrucker

Recommended Posts

Guest Lizzie McTrucker

I'm wondering since the health care reforms have begun, are insurance companies more likely now to cover GRS or is it the same as before where many don't and just a select few do? I have Anthem BCBS of Indiana and reading their website I'm kind of unclear if it's covered or not. I'm kind of hoping with the health care reform that more insurance companies now cover it but I'm just as confused now reading their website as I was about a year or two ago when I first tried searching for information. It might just boil down to what coverage my employer is paying for but who knows.

Granted, yes, I could call the # on the back of my card but I figured I'd ask here first. (also I hate talking on the phone with my voice)

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I can only say i hate the medical situation here and especially the insurance "industry" whose goal is to make money and not provide care. Denials even if not justified often seem to be constant with the commercial policies i've had. Medicare is at least seemingly honest in it's approach.

Lizzy if you do call to get their approval make sure to keep notes, times and the names of the people with whom you speak. Even better get them to send you a note or point out where in the policy you are covered.

Hugs,

Charlize

Link to comment

I think it more depends on your state and if they require it. I'm in Georgia wuth Cigna and it explicitly covers NOTHING to do with transgender issues. But pretty sure the same kind of plan would in California for instance.

Link to comment
  • Admin

As I understand it, he new Federal rules "allow" insurers to cover GD-related health care, but don't mandate it. A few states mandate that insurers cover GD care, and some include it under Medicaid. In short, its a hodgepodge (first time I've used that word I think ;) ) and you'll need to do some research, Lizzie. Sorry I couldn't be more helpful.

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment

As I understand it, he new Federal rules "allow" insurers to cover GD-related health care, but don't mandate it. A few states mandate that insurers cover GD care, and some include it under Medicaid. In short, its a hodgepodge (first time I've used that word I think ;) ) and you'll need to do some research, Lizzie. Sorry I couldn't be more helpful.

Carolyn Marie

It is my understanding and I could be wrong but, Federal is working more towards not allowing carriers to forbid gender care. It does not have to be a blanket coverage in the policies. That is up to the carriers discretion. Where does that leave us? Insurance companies are able to do procedures on a case by case basis if one files for an Organizational Determination. That would give carriers more control than a blanket open door coverage that could leave them with a landslide of claims. As we all get a handle on healthcare reform, I suspect that coverage will become more common and accessible.

OK how does one get one? By having all your doctors on board, with all the letters and supporting documentation ready, all I's dotted, all Tee's crossed before filing the request. The GT says it is vitally medically necessary and you are in suitable mental health to receive it. Your medical doctor(s) also supports a vital medical need. Also the issue of health and quality of life. Then it is submitted and you wait. If the answer is favorable, very good. If no, you have to appeal. It may be covered completely or with the co-pay of the carrier's choice. It is worth a shot, but you have to be ready. Don't do any tire kicking inquiries.

This comes with my usual JodyAnn disclaimer: I am not an insurance agent or carrier, nor have I ever played on on TV or DVD. This is the information I have gathered to use for myself. Your mileage may very. I am working to get all the steps in place and I will be one of the OD pioneers to get my new motor and help others in the future. "I want to trade in my old Hot Rod for a new Sports Car... I don't think I will let any men drive it though???" Giggle. That's my $.02, I'm sure others could possibly find fault with my findings. Please do your own research, this is just a clue where to look. Hug. JodyAnn

Link to comment

Hi Lizzie

It's still a mess out there. Each state and insurance carrier is a yes - no - maybe? Many large employers self insure and hire aninsurance company to manage their employee health care which can really make it a nightmare. I was employed by the University of Missouri which uses Coventry Healthcare to manage their health plan. They have the usual we don't cover Sex Reassignment Surgery clause.

I went to my HR with letters from my Gender Therapist, Clinical PhD Psychologist, and a letter from my HRT prescribing physician who all were on board that in my case, GRS was a medical necessity. I had all of the policy letters from the AMA, Psychiatry and Psychology, Society of family Practice, you get the idea, all the Professional associations that have come out and stated that surgery is a medical necessity and ought to be covered. Put it all in a 3 ring binder. I even wrote my doctors letter and my Gender Therapist used my letter as a template to write her letter. I'm pretty good at writing a very professional medical letters of recommendation. This all was sent into Coventry for evaluation. I was called by two of the insurance companies doctors and had a phone consultation that lasted over an hour. These two doctors both wrote letters recommending that Coventry cover my procedure.

On top of that, the University Board of Curators added Gender Identity and Gender expression to their non-discrimination policy. In the end it was denied because of the exclusion in the policy. At my age and Dysphoria was really kicking my butt, I went to Thailand and paid for myself. I weenied out. I could have fought this and won based on medical necessity, I just didn't have the time to fight it.

What I've learned is even when their is a non-discrimination policy, doesn't mean squat. When the company is more into appearances, hey look how wonderful we are and how enlightened we are because we have this cutsy policy on paper. We just don't enforce our own policy unless somebody embarrasses us big time by suing us. It's still a crappy world for us TS people who as the Vice-President acknowledged, Transgender people are the last group of people in the United States to be afforded Human Rights. It's coming, sometime in the next decade. In short, at 59 years old, I just didn't have the luxury of time to push this through.

And even playing nice and taking it through the employers own procedures, it still cost me my job. I stilled retired early from the University and I may still write a book about my experiences. Lizzy, it's still a crap shoot on whether or not insurance will cover your surgery. I spent 31 days in Thailand. Had world class healthcare over their. Enjoyed a heck of a trip and saw a nice piece of the world for around 14 thousand dollars which covered everything. Or you can have your surgery here in the U.S. For approximately 20 to 30 thousand dollars depending on the surgeon. There's no guarantee on insurance coverage out there yet except for a half dozen states that mandate coverage. Good luck getting coverage. Kathy

Link to comment
Guest ToriLynn

One thing to remember is that since Medicare will be covering GRS and because of that you will more than likely see a slow shift to everyone covering. It will take time but normally medicare, at least when i was dealing with insurance companies, sets the minimum standard for what is covered by other companies. That said, it may not apply in this case due to the feeling many have toward the the community depending on where you live.

Hugs,

Tori

Link to comment

The Medicare thing is a double edged sword. Dr. Bowers was apparently just talking about it. Apparently Medicare won't pay anywhere near what the top surgeons charge and since the Drs can't ask for more money on top of Medicare they're essentially left in a position of not being able to accept it -which might hurt their elgibity with other insurers as well.

Link to comment
Guest ToriLynn

The Medicare thing is a double edged sword. Dr. Bowers was apparently just talking about it. Apparently Medicare won't pay anywhere near what the top surgeons charge and since the Drs can't ask for more money on top of Medicare they're essentially left in a position of not being able to accept it -which might hurt their elgibity with other insurers as well.

This is very true and medicare covering something is normally a double edged sword no matter what you are talking about due to the fact that what medicare pays is the standard for all insurance companies. However, there are still companies that will cover more than what medicare covers and i was speaking solely on the coverage. As with anything if you want better coverage you buy high end policies. But, since medicare does cover it you will see other companies start to. The amount they will cover will be dependent on the company and the policy.

Hugs

Tori

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...

Here in Wisconsin, United health care will cover up to $75,000 lifetime for anything transgender related. Now that's if you can afford the $728 a month premium. They also told me that there is no waiting period to use such insurance.

I know I can't afford it anymore since I changed my job.

Keep praying girls

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   9 Members, 0 Anonymous, 89 Guests (See full list)

    • Maddee
    • Petra Jane
    • Ivy
    • Mirrabooka
    • Lorelei
    • Ashley0616
    • Betty K
    • Lydia_R
    • missyjo
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      769k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,049
    • Most Online
      8,356

    LostAndForgotten
    Newest Member
    LostAndForgotten
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Adamtoeve
      Adamtoeve
      (38 years old)
    2. Andy C.
      Andy C.
      (22 years old)
    3. Asher the Enby Goddex
      Asher the Enby Goddex
      (23 years old)
    4. camerashy
      camerashy
      (52 years old)
    5. Stacy S.
      Stacy S.
      (55 years old)
  • Posts

    • Mirrabooka
      Whether it is Sunday or not - may I ask, how long does the whole process take?    My every-morning basic 'beauty routine' - shave face/wash/hair/other grooming already takes over 10 minutes. My wife is basically beating down the door, lol! 
    • Ivy
      We did pretty well for almost 40 years.   But by then we were kinda moving in different directions spiritually and on some other things.  I might have moved the most significantly.  I think my trans woman was trying to assert herself, although it still took a little more time for the egg to crack.     I was the one who moved out (although we had been sleeping in separate rooms for about a year).  I was satisfied to just be separated, but after a bit she filed for divorce.  I didn't contest it - our kids were all adults by then.  She remarried, I haven't.  Now her husband has died and she is back in this area.   Yeah, we are still friends, but sometimes it's hard for me if I've been around her.  I do miss her.  She uses my now name and gender for me.   I am lonely.  I think I could remarry, maybe, if I found the right person, but I don't see much chance of that.  I'm in my 70's, this is a pretty conservative area, and I am a transgender woman.  So this is how it is - at least for me.
    • missyjo
      daisy nightie..soon to be bike shorts n t for alpaca sheering day..then shower b something cute for dinner   all the hair ideas..I started biotin..thought him was just ed..interesting..did you pick hims for a reason?   hugs to all    
    • Lorelei
      That is am what I planning on. Take the defensive driving class after the conviction and all goes away aside from the fine I pay. My vehicle is a commercial vehicle (10,000+ pound diesel pickup truck with commercial plates), but since I exclusively use it for personal use so I do not need or have a CDL.
    • KymmieL
      I seems like I am dreading going to my job more each day. So, I take it as a sign to jump ship. All the time I expect to be chastised. It is not a good way to have a job. I am on the hunt for a new one, however nothing has surfaced.   Kymmie
    • EasyE
    • Ladypcnj
      Hi Heather, thank you for the welcome 
    • Lydia_R
      I'm currently on the ballot for an open US Representative seat in Portland Oregon.  Here are some of the news stories on me:   Rachel Lydia Rand on Ballotpedia: https://ballotpedia.org/Rachel_Rand#Campaign_themes KATU 2 (ABC) Know Your Candidates 2024: Rachel Lydia Rand https://www.katu.com/news/know-your-candidates/rachel-lydia-rand-d-congress-district-3 League of Women Voters Candidate Forum for US Representative https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOoS39CTEOw KOIN 6 Written Interview | top issues, what's going right https://www.koin.com/news/politics/rachel-rand-on-running-for-district-3-top-issues-whats-going-right/ League of Women Voter's Interview with Rachel Lydia Rand https://youtu.be/V5o9RKE3WVo     This is my third time running for US Rep.  Campaigning is very challenging for me because I only have two family members still alive and I've spent less than 2 weeks with them in my life and I have virtually no social network to start with and I don't belong to any social media sites.  I haven't even been able to post here and on sites like it because of rules about self-promotion.   I'm boldly saying in these videos that I want to be appointed to vice-president in the next 5 years.  My platform is about addressing climate change and everything that comes with it.  Population decline is the number one proposal I have and it is very, very scary and controversial for most people.  The way I see it is that oil is more than a fuel we burn in our cars, it's a substance we pave our roads with.  And it will run out, so at some point in the future, most of these roads are going to go away and we'll have a much harder time distributing food.  I play chromatic pennywhistle and I'm this iconic whistleblower politician saying that we will not be able to support 10 billion people at the end of the century on wind and solar power.  Even solar panels are made with oil and there isn't much difference between a wind turbine and a dam.  If we can build skyscrapers and nuclear power, then you'd think we'd be able to figure out how to make a wind turbine 100 years ago.  It's simply not as efficient.  The numbers I've crunched say that if we have one child for every two women for the next 40 years and then go back to normal replacement rate, we'll get our population down to 2 billion by 2099 which is where the world was at in 1950.  If we don't do that and stay on this current path for the projected 10 billion by 2100, then when oil runs out and climate change raises sea levels and floods coastal cities, humanity is going to be in a very uncivil situation.   I'm sorry that I'm not making a huge issue of transgender rights.  Of course I'm here to support our community.  I'd be highly visible on our national and international scene as a transwoman.  I tend to focus on engineering realities rather than these social issues.  It upsets me that people take engineering for granted.  People tend to just get in their cars and think that there will be some space age technical solution that will make it all OK.   OK, that's my rant for the day :-)  Coffee is on.  4:26am.  The ABC station is interviewing me again in a few hours and people can vote for me today.  Please consider spreading the word.  I'm only one person and it takes an incredible amount of effort to keep my political thinking and platform going.   Sincerely, Rachel Lydia Rand Jazz Musician | Software Engineer  
    • Heather Shay
      RIP Duane Eddy - pioneer rock and roll guitarist        
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
      Spent night chatting with spouse, girlfriend.
    • Heather Shay
      "Exstatic" is an adjective that means feeling great rapture or delight. For example, "His wife gave birth to their first child, and he was ecstatic about it". Synonyms of "ecstatic" include rapturous, entranced, enthusiastic, and frenzied.
    • Heather Shay
      Do you plan to be active during Pride Month? If so, what type of activities?
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...