Insurance companies use a number of approaches to cut costs. This can mean your health plan won’t cover certain treatments prescribed by your health care professional or the plan requires you to take a number of steps before your treatment is approved. These practices may violate state or federal laws put into place to protect you. To find out if your insurer may have acted improperly, ask yourself these questions.
Step Therapy
Is my insurer making me try a less expensive treatment before covering the medication that my health care provider prescribed?
This practice is referred to as step therapy. It may violate certain federal and state laws if applied in a discriminatory manner, which means that the insurer treats you and others like you less favorably solely because of your health condition.[1]
Adverse Tiering
Do I have to pay an unaffordable co-pay or co-insurance for most, if not all, drugs that treat my condition?
This practice is referred to as adverse tiering. It involves placing certain drugs, such as those used to treat chronic conditions like cancer, HIV, and rheumatoid arthritis, in more expensive cost-sharing tiers, causing you to pay more out-of-pocket for those drugs.[2] It may also violate certain federal and state laws if applied in a discriminatory manner.
Nonmedical Switching
Is my insurer forcing me to take a different medication, even though my current medication works well, by refusing to cover it any longer or increasing my co-pay or co-insurance?
This practice is referred to as nonmedical switching. It occurs when your insurer (not your health care provider or pharmacist) forces you to switch from your current medication to a different (but not generic) drug by either refusing to cover your drug any longer or increasing the out-of-pocket cost of your drug.[3] It can violate certain state consumer protection laws.
Prior Authorization
Is my insurer requiring my health care provider or me to obtain approval before it will cover my medication?
This practice is called prior authorization. It occurs when your insurer requires you or your health care provider to obtain its approval before it will cover a treatment.[4] Prior authorization policies can delay or interrupt care, waste time, and complicate medical decisions. These policies can violate state and federal laws if applied in a certain manner.