My mother paid for supplemental insurance (BCBS) for years and was just advised because she has Medicare and Medicaid she did not need to. She is soon to be 78 and I believe qualified for Medicaid for at least the last 12 years. Is she entitled to a reimbursement of the premiums? She was paying $175 a month!
This is not a criticism, just the factual way it would be viewed.
It's incumbent on each of us to do the necessary research and make our own decisions as to whether to carry supplement or gap insurance.
And in my experience, if premiums aren't paid after I believe it's 2 months, BCBS stops coverage; in any event, it wouldn't pay for any of its portion of costs incurred during that period.
That raises another issue; BCBS could state that, if it did pay anything during the period of coverage, it would have the right to recover those payments.
This is a sad situation, and it's kind of you to share it; people can always see this a situation that they should avoid.
Nikkip looks like she knows she paid for the medigap i.e. the supplemental insurance policy. Nikki has fallen into the same situation as I did…my mother has medicare, Medicaid and was also paying for a supplement to medicare which mom has AARP. I myself didn’t know that if mom has Medicaid it could now be the supplement to medicare and the AARP supplemental (medigap) was not needed all this time. So mom was over insured. So all my mother needed was medicare and Medicaid. Right now I am still choosing to keep her on all 3 and really only using medicare and AARP supplemental, because of where I live there really is no doctor who will take Medicaid, it would severely limit her choices in all her specialties mom needs, of course I am learning that AARP amounts are so little that it would actually behoove us to drop the AARP and pay out of pocket, because mom’s premiums are 267.00/month, it would be cheaper to pay out of pocket (OOP) than keeping the supplemental. I keep it because mom is 91 and I worry if she were to be hospitalized for days, that’s when AARP would help us, and really only for that reason. In answer to NikkiP’s question though, it would look like it is “on her” that she continued to pay for BCBS, because her mother was still covered and insured for that time and could use the policy as needed and probably did use the insurance during those years, so to me, she could definitely NOT recoup those premiums for those 12 yrs. Just going forward, cancel BCBS and use Medicaid, but just know, in my experience, depending on where you live, it will limit your options of doctors. ~If you’re okay with that.
There was an upside & a downside with this at least for my mom.
Her BCBS was high option federal (policy through my deceased dad) w/premiums taken from federal annuity automatically each mo. Premium was very low (a federal perk!). TX Medicaid pending took almost 6 mos to process, so during that period many services provided at NH & an ER visit were billed to & paid by BCBS. Once she became Medicaid eligible, BCBS can either become "suspended" or cancelled. Mom did suspension. So this made her Medicaid required co-pay or SOC (share of cost) of income paid each month to the NH higher once the suspension in place at month 6. Now in speaking with her caseworker at month 4 or 5 on a snafu on her life insurance policy clarification, he told me to try to make it so that the month she got the 6 mo premium $ back to have her assets under 2K with the added in premium $, otherwise she'd be over Medicaid asset limit & it would need to be reported. The back pay premium was NOT owed to NH as long as her overall financial eligibility was within Medicaid limits. $ back was just a few hundred.
But one problem that arose and went on for months & month & months was that vendors who were paid by BCBS had their payments clawed back. Or if they continued to bill BCBS had their invoices rejected. If they wanted to be paid, they had to rebill to Medicaid. Medicaid pays lots, lots LOTS less than BCBS. I sent a certified letter to NH on the BCBS suspension at month 6 when filed & received by BCBS. NH as they - via the medical director or DON - contact & contract vendors have the responsibility to let them know. Long story short…vendors not happy. Couple did NOT participate in Medicaid, so no rebilling done but payment claw backed. Clawbacks do not happen quickly plus many vendors have so much billing back & forth not noticed right away. One PT billed my mom at month 9; others well over a year later. Problem is that if they are on NH Medicaid, they have no real $ to pay bills in full. One of the PT's was willing to be paid partially discounted from the BCBS premium overage. Another just wouldn't & went off at a care plan meeting on this & not happy with either myself or NH (as NH DON didn't tell vendors). Another sent bills for over 2 years & again would not take partial payments.
My point is that IF your mom had any services paid by BCBS for all those years and you/mom file to get all that $ paid to BCBS, BCBS will clawback and vendors can bill your mom or if you signed off to be financial responsible for her seek you out to get paid; file collection.
Also if your mom were to get all those years(?) of payments back, it probably would not be smallish $ like my mom's was. But have a comma in it - 1 year alone is $ 2,100 much less 10 or 12 years!!! - so your mom would be ineligible for Medicaid, possibly for months and a whole stack of paperwork to wade through plus probably have to reimburse the state for care provided or do a spend-down. 10 years = $ 21,000.
Let it be. She & you totally own the error, you all's mistake. Doing anything now becomes a total clusterF of problems imo.
Dad bought a LTC policy for mother, so she would not have to be a burden to us kids ( as he felt he was). It will never be used and we know we can't get back the cost of the policy. It's like buying car insurance and you don't drive. Ins companies don't care--if you bought the policy, you "HOPE" you won't need it, but it's insurance against the unforeseeable. Because you didn't need it, or use it, that's great for them. It's like a bet: You bet you'll need the insurance, and the ins co bets you won't. They win, always. Why are they so huge and make so much money?? You can try, but, don't have any hopes hinged on getting anything back.
Insurance Companies do not entertain reimbursements.
In any event, the likelihood of an insurance policy returning premiums because the insured later discovered that she was over-insured is slim to nil. She bought the insurance and the insurance company insured her, whether or not she ever applied for benefits.