Free, at-home COVID-19 tests can still be tough to find at Illinois pharmacies [Chicago Tribune]
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President Joe Biden’s administration announced in January, amid an intense COVID-19 surge, that health insurance companies would be required to cover up to eight at-home COVID-19 tests a month per person. People were supposed to be able to walk into many pharmacies, flash their health insurance cards and walk out with free boxes of at-home COVID-19 tests. Or, if a pharmacy wasn’t in-network with their insurance, a person was supposed to be able to submit a claim for reimbursement for at least
But it’s still not always that easy — a problem that comes as
Some pharmacies are demanding customers pay for the tests upfront and then submit claims to their insurers for reimbursement even though the pharmacies are among those that are supposed to accept insurance for the tests. Other pharmacies are allowing customers with insurance to get the tests at no cost, but asking that they wait as long as two hours for them. Some pharmacies say they’re out of stock, while others have shelves brimming with the tests.
Those who buy the tests at pharmacies outside of their insurance companies’ networks are sometimes finding they must fill out confusing forms to submit claims for reimbursement.
“It’s extremely challenging and I don’t think it needs to be,” said
McClelland likes to have COVID-19 tests on-hand so she can test her family before gathering with others. She also wants to make sure she has them in her home in case there’s another COVID-19 surge, and the tests again become scarce.
In early April, she tried to buy at-home tests from a
“I was kind of surprised by that because I just kind of assumed pharmacies had this on-hand at this point in the game,” McClelland said.
A couple of weeks later, she then ordered them online from a CVS through Instacart, paying for them upfront. She now has to submit a claim for reimbursement. She also decided to try to get some directly through her insurance company,
“Every time I have been attempting to do something like this recently, I can’t help but think about people who are having more challenges,” McClelland said. “I feel like I have limited challenges. For me to feel challenged by this process, I know it’s got to be so much worse for other people to the point that no one pursues it.”
McClelland isn’t the only one jumping through hoops to get the free tests, which can otherwise cost more than
A Tribune reporter recently visited more than half a dozen pharmacies to try to get free at-home COVID-19 tests, covered by insurance. The Tribune only visited pharmacies listed as being part of Prime Therapeutic’s network with
Pharmacy workers at two Mariano’s stores told the Tribune they were not running the at-home tests through insurance, and customers had to pay for them upfront and submit claims for reimbursement.
Three Walgreens pharmacies said they could run the tests through insurance, but it would take anywhere from 15 minutes to two hours. A pharmacy worker at a
A pharmacy worker at a CVS store said the tests could be run through insurance in 20 to 30 minutes, but the tests were in a different part of the store. They were near the cash registers at the front of the store, meaning a person would have to find them at the front of the store and then take them to the pharmacy in the back to get them covered by insurance. People can also buy them at registers in the front, but have to pay for them out of pocket when doing so.
When asked why the two Mariano’s stores wouldn’t take insurance for the tests, despite being listed as in-network with
Simley, with
“We’re continuing to educate participating pharmacies to make sure they’re following the process outlined by the federal government,” Simley said. “If you use a pharmacy in Prime’s network, you should not have to submit a separate claim for reimbursement when you purchase the tests at the pharmacy counter.”
Regarding the long wait times at some Walgreens pharmacies, Walgreens spokeswoman
A spokesman for
Some
The federal government is allowing people to get up to eight free tests per household through https://www.covid.gov/tests. People can get free tests on that site regardless of insurance status.
Some people who want more than those eight tests from the federal government are ordering them through stores’ websites or through their insurers online.
She’s also ordered the tests directly through an Optum website, with no upfront cost, but she hasn’t yet figured out how to order eight a month for each of her family members, rather than just for herself and her husband.
“Perhaps if I had done the paperwork reimbursement route that would have worked, but that’s a lot of money upfront,” she said.
Members of
Ordering tests through insurers’ websites, however, can sometimes mean a wait of a few days to weeks before the tests arrive — not ideal for someone who is sick or has just been exposed to the illness.
“I’m grateful for the access to the tests, and I’m grateful that they’re covered, but it is burdensome, and it really disproportionately affects people that don’t have the time to sink into it or that may not have internet access at home,” Kelly said of the process.
“Families really feel like they’re on their own, and that they need to get the tests in case they need them because you can’t always get them in a pinch,” she said.
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