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Can the insurance company still send a bill for this medical expense? |
Someone I know has arthritis and gets an injection every couple months. She was at a job that covered the injection but she was in the middle of changing jobs. She put her two weeks notice in on 8/8/07. They told her to consider that her last day and not to work the two weeks out. They also told her, her insurance would still cover her injection on 8/10/07. She had the injection and just today got a bill for $13,000 for the injection on that day. She also got a letter on 9/10/07 saying her insurance was up on the day she was let go but the work place said she was covered for the rest of the month. Her new job she started the next week has insurance to cover this. Why was she billed now for it? Who fault is it and what should she do to get this right. She obviously doesn't have the money to pay and shouldn't. Thanks for your help, this is so insane. She never mentioned anything about COBRA coverage. I am pretty sure if she had the option to take coverage for this appointment she would have. This isn't something that snuck up on her. She is meeting with her cousins boss who is a lawyer to get things settled tomorrow. I could see if she got let go on the 8th, got a letter on the 9th that her insurance was gone, then had the appointment on the 10th anywa then it would be her fault. But also to get billed over 4 months later for this? Something isn't right. Hiya: She would have been able to continue her coverage under COBRA anyhow-she might have to pay some premium but should act now before it's too late. You would need to check state law or w/ a local attorney for any issues w/ the company and insurance company but something's not right. I have been in the insurance field since 1991. Coverage is usually on a monthly basis-that's how the employer should be billed-not on a partial monthly basis. If she didn't get it in writing, that she was covered until the end of the month, she's responsible for that bill. Well, first of all, the employer can't tell her that the insurance company "will" cover her injection on 8/10/07. Its outside the scope of what the employer is able to determine for a variety of reasons (employer doesn't know how the doctor is going to bill the claim, employer doesn't know whether she's exceeded the frequency limits for her particular injection, etc.)...only the insurance company can tell you that something "will" be covered. It's not the insurance sending the bill but the provider who gave the injection. There have been many helpful responses to this situation posted, so I won't add another. HOWEVER, I have to wonder just what type of injection this person is getting that would cost $13,000. The three common injectables for rheumatoid arthritis are Remicade, Enbrel, and Humira, NONE of which cost anywhere near that amount. Are you sure she's not talking about $1,300, and not $13,000 ? |
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