Posts about insurance denying prescription coverage, price discrepancies between insurers and discount pharmacies (e.g., "would cost over $350 per month" vs "your company’s price is -$7.50"), tracking of brand-name vs generics in insurer portals ("portal only tracks brand name drugs"), and administrative/pharmacy backend issues requiring prescriber paperwork.
Created 5 days ago • 15 documents • Range: 2/9 8:47pm – 2/10 1:57amjust figured out how my last shitty insurance lied to me about what medications it would cover in advance wrt hrt--bc of the pharmaceutical industry, the portal only tracks brand name drugs and hrt drugs are all generics. so they got away with banning it in advance of the new round of obamacare
“it is not that the medicines have failed to meet the.. evidence standards required for PBS subsidy; it is that for business reasons the makers have never even applied..for pensioners..the failure to get the PBS subsidy meant they were not able to get their medicine at a $7.70 concession price”
SURPRISE!!! ANOTHER TRUMPTAED SCAM!!! NO INSURANCE? TRY GOODRX!!! or call the manufactorer, they many times will give you the meds for free if medically necessary. www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDoY...
Oh, yes, well, 90% of that is the same here, actually. Heavily restricted, you have to sign for them and can't have someone else pick up, and can only get a 30 day amount at a time. All extremely annoying. The only difference is you don't have to have an official, confirmed diagnosis to do a...
Thank you. My son has mental illness, easily treated with prescription medicine. His insurance company just sent a letter stating they won’t cover one of his prescriptions anymore. It would cost over $350 per month out of pocket. (His total monthly income is $1300.) your company’s price is -$7.50.
I found out about the change after my dr’s office notified me that they were not issuing a new prescription for the device. My pharmacy then let me know that the doctor’s office had denied the refill. Neither one bothered to let me know that it was the insurance company’s rules that had changed.
I don't know why they say that when ostensibly the pharmacy actually has no hand in the decision making process, I assume it's some kind of backend thing. What you're trying to do is make sure the prescriber has sent whatever form they need to to the insurance, then the insurance usually takes their
How's this for a broken RX / insurance system? Drug (every two weeks at-home injectable) costs $4500/month. I am well-insured with a HDHP. I do research and find out the drug's manufacturer offers a co-pay card. Great. Co-pay card pays the ENTIRE co-pay, even though it's start of year, wiping […]