Sheila Lawless is the office manager at a small rheumatology practice in Wichita Falls, Texas, about two hours outside of Dallas. She makes sure everything in the office runs smoothly 鈥 scheduling patients, collecting payments, keeping the lights on. Recently she added another duty–incorporating the trickle of patients with insurance plans purchased on the new听Affordable Care Act exchanges.听
Open enrollment doesn鈥檛 end until March 31, but people who have already bought Obamacare plans are beginning to use them. 鈥淲e had a spattering in January鈥攎aybe once a week. But I think we鈥檙e averaging two to three a day now,鈥 says Lawless.听
That doesn鈥檛 sound like many new customers, but it鈥檚 presented a major challenge: verifying that these patients have insurance. Each exchange patient has required the practice to spend an hour or more on the phone with the insurance company. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been on hold for an hour, an hour and 20, an hour and 45, been disconnected, have to call back again and repeat the process,鈥 she explains. Those sorts of hold times add up fast.听
In the past, offices have been able to make sure patients are听insured quickly,听by using an听online verification system. But for听exchange patients, practices also have to call the insurer听to make sure the听patient has paid his premium. If he hasn鈥檛, the insurance company can refuse to pay the doctor for the visit, or come back later and recoup a payment it made.听
That鈥檚 because of a provision of the law that gives exchange patients who neglect to pay their premium a 鈥溾 of up to 90 days. During the first 30 days, insurers have to pay any claims incurred by the patient. But for the next 60 days, nothing is guaranteed. If the patient visits the doctor, the insurer can 鈥減end鈥 the claim 鈥 that is, wait to pay the doctor until the patient pays his premium. At the end of the 90-day grace period, if the patient has not paid the premium, the insurer can cancel the coverage and refuse to pay the pended claims, or recoup the payments it鈥檚 already made.听 And that puts the doctor鈥檚 office at risk.听
So Lawless is听听with the insurer to make sure that everything is in order before proceeding with the visit. If the premium has not been paid, Lawless gives the patient the option of rescheduling the appointment or paying in cash and then applying to his insurer for the payment.听
鈥淢ost听small practices听run lean and mean 鈥 you鈥檝e got one or two people to do this process plus do their other job duties that day as well, which is tend to the patients in front of them,鈥 says Lawless. To manage the new workload, she鈥檚 had other staffers, including nurses, step in to answer the phone. And that means longer hours, more overtime, and higher overhead expenses. And then there鈥檚 the plain old annoyance factor.听
鈥淵ou call in and you hit option prompts and you get to listen to no less than an hour of Blue Cross Blue Shield intro music. I could sing you the tune, that鈥檚 how often I鈥檝e had to listen to it,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y staff said yesterday, it鈥檚 a sad shame within their prompts you can鈥檛 pick your music as well. If you鈥檙e going to have to wait that long, at least let us listen to what we want to listen to!鈥澨
Blue Cross Blue Shield in Texas is the only insurer offering exchange plans in Wichita Falls. Dr. Dan McCoy, the company鈥檚 chief medical officer, says part of the problem was the health law鈥檚 compressed timeline.听
鈥淐learly at the end of December there were a significant number of members that enrolled and it鈥檚 taken some time to work through that volume in membership,鈥 explains McCoy. 鈥淎nd we know this is a new day in the transformation of American health care.听So it鈥檚 going to take a little bit of time to work through that.鈥澨
Health Care Service Corp., which owns Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas, has tried to address the situation by adding another 600 employees at its call center to handle the influx of calls and by extending business hours. McCoy has also been working directly with the听听to work out the kinks.听
Anders Gilberg, senior vice president of government affairs at the听听in Washington, D.C., a trade group for practice administrators, says the real problem is that signing up for coverage on the exchange isn鈥檛 as simple as the White House has made it sound.听
鈥淲hat we鈥檝e found is that messaging out of the [Obama] administration right now that鈥檚 aimed at the public, it tends to oversimplify the complexity of what it takes to get covered on the exchanges,鈥 says Gilberg. 鈥淛ust because you enrolled in coverage doesn鈥檛 mean your coverage is effective.鈥澨
Even if patients pay their premium right away, it could be up to six weeks before their coverage听. To have insurance start at the beginning of a month, the coverage generally must be purchased by the middle of the previous month. A plan purchased on Feb. 14 would be effective March 1. But a plan purchased on Feb. 16, for example, would not become effective until April 1. Go to the doctor before then, and your insurer doesn鈥檛 pay.听
鈥淚t鈥檚 not a surprise that given the subtle nuances and differences of what these exchange products are, that you鈥檙e in a gray area right now where there鈥檚 a little confusion on the patient side and the practice side. And I think that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e seeing a lot of right now,鈥 says Gilberg.听
For a brand new program, that鈥檚 to be expected, he adds. And it doesn鈥檛 mean the exchange isn鈥檛 working. The real test will be what happens in April, when open enrollment ends and everyone who has purchased a plan offered through the health law鈥檚 online exchanges plan is clearly covered.听
In the meantime, Lawless offers this advice to patients who have bought plans on the exchange:听鈥淚f you pay your premium prior to [visiting the doctor], print that out and bring it with you because that will certainly save all a lot of grief.鈥
