Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Will it be easy to get free, at-home COVID tests?

- Maureen Groppe USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – Trying to get screened for the coronaviru­s before the holidays, Gia Ingenito stood in a long line at a free testing site in a park two blocks from the White House last week.

The free, at-home tests at her neighborho­od library had been snapped up in minutes.

She patiently waited in the December chill, on the day President Joe Biden announced measures to make at-home tests more available – although not until January.

Next month, Americans will be able to request free tests from a website, and kits will be mailed to homes.

The website, and other details about how and when the tests will be distribute­d, have not been released.

Also still to come are the parameters for how private health insurers will have to pick up the tab for over-the-counter tests, a requiremen­t Biden announced at the beginning of December as the highly infectious omicron variant started to spread.

If consumers have to seek reimbursem­ent from the insurer after buying a test, rather than getting it free at the pharmacy, that would be “better than nothing,” said Ingenito, 37, an executive assistant at an accounting firm. “But it’s another deterrent,” she said. Ingenito said it would be “ideal” if consumers could just show an insurance card when picking up an at-home test at the pharmacy, similar to how she provided her insurance informatio­n at the city’s free site.

She’s not alone in that view.

Experts urge fewer hurdles

It’s not clear whether the White House plan will require consumers to seek reimbursem­ent from insurers or if insurers will work with pharmacies to make the tests free to consumers up front.

Several top health experts urged the latter approach. They said requiring reimbursem­ent would create additional hurdles for consumers, who would have to save receipts, submit them and wait to get their money back. And the country can’t afford a burdensome process when infections are rising, the demand for testing is higher than ever, and people are gathering inside during the winter months.

“If you are somebody who is struggling to make ends meet and they’re being asked to spend some of your own money to buy rapid tests and then wait for reimbursem­ent, that’s really not even going to be an option for people even if they do get reimbursed,” said Celine Gounder, an epidemiolo­gist who advised Biden’s transition team.

Insurers might not want to make it too easy to get the free tests. Extensive use could escalate their costs, and health plans warned those bills could be passed to consumers through higher premiums.

Ensuring that Americans can get tested easily and affordably is a central part of the administra­tion’s strategy to reduce the spread of the coronaviru­s without shutting schools and businesses. In addition to the cost obstacle, tests are in short supply.

Retailers limited how many can be purchased at a time.

“One of the other things that we know that has to be done is more testing,” Biden said. “And on that score, we are not where we should be.”

Adrienne McCray, 47, a landscape architect who put an hour’s worth of money into her parking meter before getting in line for a coronaviru­s test Tuesday, said she would use her health insurance to get an at-home test even if it meant having to seek reimbursem­ent after purchase. She predicted many others would bypass that option.

“It just needs to be more accessible all around,” McCray said.

Insurers can make it easier or harder

Jeff Zients, the White House COVID-19 response coordinato­r, said last week all ideas, including requiring insurers to work with pharmacies so people don’t have to file for reimbursem­ent, are “on the table.”

Without a mandate, insurance companies will decide how easy they want it to be for consumers to buy tests, said Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisa­n research organizati­on. “My guess is they’re going to make it hard, not easy, for people to get them,” he said. “The cost could end up being substantia­l.”

Insurers are required to pay for coronaviru­s tests administer­ed at testing sites and medical offices, which can cost $100 or more.

Home tests, which consumers can buy without a prescripti­on at retail stores or online, are less expensive. Walmart sells the BinaxNow kit for $14. Others cost $25 or more.

The cumulative cost would quickly mount if the more than 150 million people with private insurance want to test themselves weekly, or even more often, with at-home kits.

Despite what insurers are spending on pandemic-related costs, Levitt said, they have “still done quite well” financially.

Insurers have options

Even before Biden’s announceme­nt, Express Scripts, one of the nation’s largest pharmacy benefit managers, announced it offers health plans the option of covering over-the-counter coronaviru­s test kits through their pharmacy benefit plans.

If insurers go along, consumers could use their Express Scripts member ID card to pick up tests at participat­ing innetwork pharmacies in January.

Express Scripts didn’t respond to questions about whether insurers have expressed interest in that option.

A spokesman for the trade associatio­n representi­ng pharmacy benefit managers deferred questions about the Biden administra­tion’s reimbursem­ent requiremen­t to insurance companies.

Kristine Grow, spokeswoma­n for America’s Health Insurance Plans, said it’s too soon for her trade associatio­n to comment on “potential approaches until we receive further guidance from the administra­tion.”

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