In June, I stopped going to the low-cost clinic and started seeing my GP for hormones. My new plan is kind of strange and has three tiers. I don't pick a tier; I move in and out of them, depending on what kind of care I'm getting. I thought I had the tiers all figured out until I received a bill for the GP visit. I figured that it would be covered eventually, but then I received a second notice and paid it, thinking that I must have been mistaken about how the plan works.
Then I received a belated denial of coverage from the plan itself. No reason given--just that these services were not covered. WTF? I called the insurance company. After a protracted hold, I was informed that my doctor had put "unspecified" for the services and should have been specific. The company would get in touch with the office, clarify the reason for my visit, and get back to me.
This is a trans-friendly plan, so I knew that it would be smooth sailing as soon as my purpose was clarified. But then I got the follow-up call. The nice lady said that the visit was not covered; she used some terminology that I didn't quite catch. I said that I still didn't understand, and she then said that trans-related services are specifically excluded on my plan.
Adrenaline spiking, I instantly became a barracuda. "How is that possible," I snapped, "when such exclusions are ILLEGAL in California, and I specifically chose this plan because it DOES cover trans-related care?" I couldn't stop myself. At least I wasn't truly rude.
She put me on hold for several minutes and then came back, nice and solicitous. My bill had been denied because the visit was "unspecified," and everything was fine now because they had the reason for my visit, and I should always tell my doctors to be specific, blah blah blah. Reimbursement forthcoming.
My sense of panic during those minutes was overwhelming; I saw my entire future of surgeries (hysto and a multi-stage phallo) crumbling before my very eyes. I took quite some time to calm down afterward.
Now that I have calmed down, I'm trying to figure out exactly what happened. Will I face an initial denial every time, or was this woman confused about which plan I was on? All Blue Shield plans in California have to cover trans stuff now; maybe she was at an out-of-state call center and got confused. On the other hand, this plan covered trans stuff even before the law was passed. It's all very weird, and I'm still a bit confused.