U.S. health insurers may balk at paying for coronavirus antibody testing
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[June 16, 2020]
By Caroline Humer
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. health insurers
may balk at covering tests that look for coronavirus antibodies in some
cases, arguing that employers or the government should foot a bill
expected to run into billions of dollars.
Health insurers have largely escaped the economic pain wrought by the
pandemic. Their profits increased as many Americans delayed more routine
and expensive medical care during the recent lockdown period, while the
total cost of covering COVID-19 patients has been less than expected in
many regions with low case numbers.
Now the industry is tallying up the potential cost of expanding both
diagnostic and antibody testing, seen as a critically important
component of safely reopening businesses across the country. Diagnostic
tests determine if someone is currently infected and contagious, while
the antibody, or serology, tests show whether someone was previously
infected and possibly immune.
Wall Street firm Jefferies & Co estimates a need for hundreds of
millions of antibody tests in the next 18 months, accounting for about
one-quarter of an anticipated $15 billion in U.S. COVID-19 test spending
through the end of 2021.
In pushing back, health insurers draw lines between what they deem as
medically necessary tests, and those done for research or return-to-work
purposes.
Businesses may require repeat testing of employees, and they note that
private health insurance covers only about half of Americans. The
government needs to provide guidance on the role of insurers, employers
and public health officials, insurers say.
"It is also critical that these strategies consider related funding in
that context,” Kristine Grow, spokeswoman for America’s Health Insurance
Plans said in a statement. AHIP estimates antibody testing will cost the
United States as much as $19 billion a year.
The biggest national insurers including UnitedHealth Group Inc, CVS
Health Corp's Aetna unit and Cigna Corp have policies to cover the
tests, which cost around $50, and related appointment fees, when doctors
say they are medically necessary. Others, such as Blue Cross of Idaho,
say they will not cover the tests to help determine the prevalence of
the disease in a community, which officials see as necessary for
controlling subsequent outbreaks.
Doctors’ groups and diagnostics makers say broad serology testing is an
important component of understanding COVID-19 and the level and length
of immunity prior infection confers.
AdvaMedDX, a trade group that represents test makers including Roche
Holding AG and Abbott Laboratories, expects about 94 million
laboratory-based tests to be shipped by the end of June. It has sent
letters to Blue Cross of Idaho and Blue Cross & Blue Shield of
Mississippi telling them their policies do not align with the law.
Neither company responded to a request for comment.
“Clinicians really need at their disposal the full range of COVID-19
testing,” said Susan Van Meter, executive director of AdvaMedDX.
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Dr. Vincent Carrao prepares to draw blood from a patient for the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) test at Palisades Oral Surgery, in
Fort Lee, New Jersey, U.S., June 15, 2020. Picture taken June 15,
2020. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
The U.S. Congress passed legislation calling for health insurance
coverage for COVID-19 testing to cope with a pandemic that has
killed more than 115,000 people and infected over 2 million
nationwide. The federal government set aside $26 billion at the
beginning of May for coronavirus testing, much of which was
earmarked for government health agencies, states and research and
development.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has since
instructed Americans not to assume a positive antibody test means
they are immune from future infection, and to continue physical
distancing and use of masks until there is more evidence around
immunity.
LIMITING USE
Covering only tests insurers see as medically necessary could limit
them to people who either have symptoms of COVID-19 or been in close
contact with someone who has. They may also cover testing for
recovered COVID-19 patients who want to donate antibody-rich plasma
for treatment of others or for children with a rare coronavirus-related
complication.
The uncertainty around coverage of tests for other purposes is
slowing a return to business for Andrew Matta, who runs the North
American Dental Group.
The group has 200 affiliated locations in about 15 states, including
New York, Georgia and Texas, with more than 1 million patients. It
is working with a physician’s group that orders both a diagnostic
and serology test ahead of dental procedures. The patient then has a
blood draw at the dentist's office, and returns three days later for
the procedure.
Dental patients are starting to return with basic safety protocols
in place, but Matta expects testing to help reassure customers more
wary of coronavirus exposure.
Insurers have been noncommittal about whether they will cover the
cost of that testing, or whether patients will end up being billed
by the testing lab, he said.
“If we knew these would be covered for pre-procedures, we would be
scaling it rapidly right now,” Matta said.
Sabrina Corlette, a health policy professor at Georgetown
University, had been advocating for private insurers to pay for
these tests broadly. She now says there should be a separate
government-run fund for testing to make sure patients – insured or
uninsured - can easily get the tests they need.
“If people fear they are going to face hundreds of dollars in bills,
they are not going to get tested," Corlette said, "and it's a risk
not just to them, but to everybody around them.”
(Reporting by Caroline Humer; editing by Michele Gershberg and Bill
Berkrot)
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