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Insurance Resources for Persons with Diabetes
Access to health care continues to be a major obstacle to diabetes management for people with diabetes who cannot afford health insurance. Diabetes is also a pre-existing condition that can cause insurers to deny or limit coverage. Below is a listing of resources available to Texans with diabetes who find themselves without health insurance. Each program or organization has specific eligibility requirements and/or application procedures, which are detailed in links to their respective sites.* For information about other insurance issues, click on the "Insurance" button on the navigation bar above. Texas Diabetes Council staff is available to answer questions you may have about insurance issues at (512) 458-7490 or . The Council does not provide or guarantee insurance coverage. While the Council can provide information about resources, it is the responsibility of the individual seeking health insurance to provide information regarding eligibility status and application information to the appropriate insurance resource. External links to other sites are intended to be informational and do not have the endorsement of the Texas Department of State Health Services. These sites may not be accessible to persons with disabilities.
The following information is offered to help patients determine whether their health benefit plan covers diabetes equipment, supplies, medication, and/or self-management training. Will my insurance cover what I need to take care of my diabetes
at home? What types of health benefit plans are not required to cover
equipment, supplies, medication, and self-management training? How do I find out if my health benefit plan is a self-funded
plan? What specific equipment is covered? Equipment and supplies include:
Prescription medications are also considered part of equipment and supplies. Repairs for the above-mentioned items are also required to be covered. Where will I go for equipment and supplies? In some communities, members may be directed to a DME (durable medical equipment) vendor; in other communities, members may be directed to a pharmacy. In some situations, the members may be required to use a mail order service or vendor. This information should be disclosed in your member handbook. Will I always get the medication that is prescribed, or will
I have to use a generic drug? What will I have to pay for my diabetes equipment and supplies? For example, if you inject insulin twice a day, you will get as much insulin as is necessary for two injections a day; if you inject up to 6 times per day, then you would get enough insulin to cover up to 6 injections per day. Where do I go for diabetes self-management training? You may be directed to a local hospital or community agency that teaches group classes. Or, you may be able to select a single individual for one-to-one training who is a certified diabetes educator (CDE); that person could be a nurse, registered dietician, or other healthcare professional. These individuals, if contracted with the health plan, would be listed in a provider directory. Where you will get self-management training will depend on the contractual relationships that the health benefit plan has established. This information should be disclosed in the member materials received upon enrollment. If I have a problem with my health benefit plan, what do I do? A complaint form may be accessed electronically at www.tdi.state.tx.us, by calling 1-800-2523439, or by writing to Texas Department of Insurance, P. O Box 149091, Austin, TX, 78714-9091. Do all states have this coverage?
SB 163 passed in 75th legislative session related to insurance coverage for persons with diabetes. Art. 21.53G of the Texas Insurance Code was amended effective 9/1/97. Bill author was Judith Zaffirini with coauthors Carona, Duncan, Lucio, and Shapleigh . The bill sponsor was Berlanga. Rules written by Dept. of Insurance and adopted in April, 1999 requiring HMOs, and indemnity carriers* to pay for: Diabetes equipment & supplies: A health benefit plan shall provide coverage for equipment and supplies for the treatment of diabetes for which a physician or practitioner has written an order, including:
(b) As new or improved treatment and monitoring equipment or supplies become available and are approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration, such equipment or supplies shall be covered if determined to be medically necessary and appropriate by a treating physician or other practitioner through a written order. (c) All supplies, including medications, and equipment for the control of diabetes shall be dispensed as written, including brand name products, unless substitution is approved by the physician or practitioner who issues the written order for the supplies or equipment. Source: 28 TAC §21.1605(a)(b)(c) Diabetes medication: (c) All supplies, including medications, and equipment for the control of diabetes shall be dispensed as written, including brand name products, unless substitution is approved by the physician or practitioner who issues the written order for the supplies or equipment. Source: 28 TAC §21.1605(c) Diabetes education: (a) A health benefit plan shall provide diabetes self-management training or coverage for diabetes self-management training for which a physician or practitioner has written an order, including a written order of a practitioner practicing under protocols jointly developed with a physician, to each insured or the caretaker of the insured in accordance with the standards contained in Insurance Code Article 21.53G, Sec. 4(b) and (c). (b) A person may not provide a component of diabetes self-management training under subsection (a) of this section unless the subject matter of the component is within the scope of the person’s practice and the person meets the education requirements as determined by the person’s licensing agency in consultation with the commissioner of health. (c) Self-management training shall include the development of an individualized management plan that is created for and in collaboration with the insured and that meets the requirements of the minimum standards for benefits in accordance with §21.2604 of this title (relating to Minimum Standards for Benefits for Persons with Diabetes). (d) Nutrition counseling and instructions on the proper use of diabetes equipment and supplies shall be provided or covered as part of the training. (e) Diabetes self-management training shall be provided, or coverage for diabetes self-management training shall be provided to an insured or a caretaker, upon the following occurrences relating to an insured, provided that any training involving the administration of medications must comply with the applicable delegation rules from the appropriate licensing agency:
(f) An HMO shall provide oversight of its diabetes self-management training program on an ongoing basis to ensure compliance with this section. (g) Health benefit plans provided by entities other than HMOs shall disclose in the plan how to access providers or benefits described in subsection (a) of this section. *Self-funded plans are excluded from the rules, as the Texas Department
of Insurance does not regulate self-funded health benefit plans.
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