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Billing FAQs

Before calling our office to discuss your bill, please take a few minutes to look through the following information. Many of the questions and issues we hear about on a daily basis are addressed below. If you still have questions, please call our billing department.

Please look at your bill to see what procedure the charge(s) are coming from. Copays are almost always applied against the office exam portion (or procedure) of your visit. If the bill states that an amount owed is a copay, it may be because we did not collect the correct (or current) copay at the time of your visit. Please note that our offices provide Specialty care, the Specialist copay indicated by your insurance provider will be applicable to the visit.

If the bill shows that an amount owed is from a different procedure, such as from a refraction or an ocular motility exam, look a bit further down to see the reason for the charge(s). The types of charges most often billed to patients include co-insurances, deductibles, and non-covered services (i.e., procedures or types of visits that are excluded from your specific health insurance policy). Refractions are typically a non-covered service with most insurance plans. Please be aware that we do not know the specifics of your health insurance policy. Thus, we do not know beforehand if, or how, your insurance will categorize or cover your eye exam, or if the refraction will be covered by your insurance.

Some insurance companies may charge an additional copay for any diagnostic tests that were performed at your visit (i.e. Fundus photos, OCTs, visual fields, etc.). Again, please look at the reason for the charge on your statement

Please look at your statement from us to see the reason that your insurance company did not pay the bill. The most common reasons are that the cost was applied to your deductible or that your insurance policy considers the exam, or part of the exam, to be a non-covered service (as sometimes happens with refractions).

Questions about either of those reasons should be directed to your insurance company. We cannot call your insurance company for you and we do not know the details of your specific policy.

If your bill shows a copay is due, that means that we did not collect the correct (or current) copay at the time of your visit. Sometimes you may receive a bill because a Coordination of Benefits (COB) request was sent to you by your insurance company. If your bill shows such a reason, it means your insurance company told us that they have requested information from you, the primary insured person. To respond to a COB request from your insurance, you can simply call the telephone number on the back of your insurance card. If you have responded to the COB, please let us know so that we can put your account on hold until your insurance company reprocesses your visit. If you do not respond to your insurance company’s COB request in a timely manner, they will deny the visit and tell us to bill you directly

If your insurance company representative told you that we billed the wrong insurance, please check your statement to see which plan we billed. Please remember that our office only participates in health insurance plans. We do not participate in vision plans (e.g., VSP, EyeMed, Davis Vision, Blue Vision, Aetna Vision, etc.).

We cannot bill your vision plan since we are not in their network. Once you pay your bill, we can provide you with a detailed receipt that you can submit to your vision plan to see if they will reimburse you directly.

What they are really saying is that in order for the visit to be covered by the specific insurance plan you have, the doctor would have had to code the visit (i.e., diagnosis) in a different way. Although that reason gets you off the phone with them (and blames the doctor’s office), it is very misleading. Our doctors code office visits according to insurance company rules and guidelines. We are not allowed to change the coding solely to have your visit covered.

Sometimes they may say that your visit was coded as a routine exam and is thus not covered. This is also a misleading statement. We do not code visits as “routine” versus “medical”. All exams are coded as office visits. Your insurance company is instead looking at the diagnoses codes from the visit and determining, according to their own reasoning, if these are “medical” conditions. If they decide that the diagnosis does not meet their definition of “medical”, their systems mark the exam as routine. Some examples of diagnoses that we have seen insurance companies mark as routine include nearsightedness, farsightedness, astigmatism, and blurry vision. Again, we cannot change or add medical diagnoses after the fact to get your insurance company to pay the claim. If you think we made a genuine mistake and missed a diagnosis that was discussed during the visit, please let us know.

You will need to call your insurance company to find out the specific answer. Although there can be many reasons for this, the two most common reasons we hear about are:

  • There was a change in the fine details of your insurance policy when it renewed (health insurance policies renew annually, even if you keep the same plan)
  • There was a different diagnosis this year than the last visit.

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