Hartford Courant

Buy kits first, get paid later

Paper receipts? US to unveil details on how self-test plan to work against coronaviru­s

- By Ricardo Alonso-zaldivar

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion’s plan for health insurers to reimburse consumers for over-the-counter COVID-19 tests echoes a bygone era when companies processed large volumes of claims from individual­s — with paper receipts.

It’s unclear if the buy-first, get-paid-later approach will spur people to go out and get the tests, even with new urgency around the omicron variant.

“It’s not likely to yield the same level of accessibil­ity that people in other countries have,” said Cynthia Cox of the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation. Cox, who tracks the U.S. health system in comparison to other advanced countries, points out that consumers in the United Kingdom can pick up free rapid tests at the pharmacy or have them delivered to their homes.

“I think we are still going to have testing problems next year,” Cox said.

Omicron is not the only reason testing is taking on renewed importance. Anticipate­d approval of antiviral pills that COVID-19 patients can take at home is also expected to increase demand for fast tests that can provide reliable results.

Officials have yet to provide operationa­l details of the Biden plan, with formal guidance due Jan. 15. But the administra­tion is confident it can overcome problems that have bedeviled U.S. testing from the start of the pandemic.

According to a White House fact sheet, health insurance companies will become the cornerston­e of testing for more than 150 million people with private coverage. Insurers would reimburse for rapid tests that deliver results in as little as 15 minutes.

Coronaviru­s response coordinato­r Jeff Zients says the administra­tion has quadrupled the supply of at-home tests, while creating a streamline­d process to get new options to market. The government is scaling up free testing at pharmacies and community venues as well.

“Our goal is to give free tests to everyone who wants one in the most efficient and effective way possible,” Zients said recently. “There is enough testing capacity in this country, and we’re confident that as more tests come to market ... innovation will continue and prices will come down.”

Estimated prices for at-homes tests in the U.S. range from about $15 to $30, compared with about $1 in Germany.

Health insurance companies have been cool to the idea.

The largest trade group, America’s Health Insurance Plans, has expressed concerns about price gouging for overthe-counter tests and higher premiums for consumers. The Blue Cross Blue Shield Associatio­n has called for “common-sense implementa­tion.”

There’s a sense that the industry is being handed a new kind of mission.

Health insurance normally covers medically necessary services and procedures, but would COVID-19 testing for a longdesire­d family reunion meet that threshold? And with the automation of insurance billing, companies say they’ll have to bring on new staff to handle the volume of claims for over-the-counter COVID-19 tests even if consumers upload their paper receipts.

Some public health experts are concerned the administra­tion may be off course.

“If what we get is that everybody has to buy tests and submit paperwork for reimbursem­ent and then get a refund, that is going to result in many people not getting tested because there are too many barriers in the way,” said Dr. Leana Wen, a former Baltimore health commission­er and commentato­r on the pandemic.

 ?? TED S. WARREN/AP ?? Boxes of Binaxnow’s COVID-19 self testing kits are displayed for sale last month at a CVS store in Lakewood, Wash.
TED S. WARREN/AP Boxes of Binaxnow’s COVID-19 self testing kits are displayed for sale last month at a CVS store in Lakewood, Wash.

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