Despite Obamacare Promise, Transgender People Have Trouble Getting Some Care
By Lisa
Gillespie
July 22, 2015 - Kaiser Health News
Transgender people are still fighting for access to crucial health services
despite the Affordable Care Actfs requirement that insurance companies not deny
coverage based on gender or health history.
The issue stems from the fact that enrollees must check a single gender box
when they sign up for a plan sold on the individual or small group markets,
according to advocates and health care providers.
"What happens is that the health insurance companies
have specific codes and they put you in as female or male; you only get services
that go with that code,h said Robin Maril, senior legislative counsel at the
Human Rights Campaign, an advocacy group for lesbian, bisexual, gay and
transgender people.
But someone who is transitioning from a woman to a man or vice versa might
still have organs associated with the other gender, such as a uterus and breast
tissue for someone born as a woman, or a prostate for someone born as a man. In
addition, the transitioning process can take years, and some transgender people
forego reassignment surgery because of cost or other reasons.
As a result, they might still need annual mammograms or pap smears even if
they are transitioning to men, or prostate exams if they are transitioning to
women — not to mention treatment for problems typically regarded as
gender-specific. They could range from sexually-transmitted diseases to
life-threatening illnesses such as cancer.
gThe idea that you have insurance and youfre still being denied basic care is
outrageous,h Maril said. She noted that before the health law, many insurance
companies had exclusions barring transition-related care or care to transgender
people in general, citing it as a gpre-existing condition.h
Under the federal health law, insurance companies selling policies in the
individual or small group markets cannot deny coverage to transgender people or
to those who are in the process of transitioning their sex. In addition, the
administration released guidance in May telling insurers that they cannot deny
coverage of sex-specific preventive services to transgender people. But
advocates say that has not always happened in practice.
Americafs Health Insurance Plans, a trade group, said that plans are
complying with the law.
gHealth plans want to make sure patients have access to the care they need,
and this latest guidance was aligned with those efforts. Plans do cover
medically necessary care and preventive services for transgender individuals,h
said Clare Krusing, of AHIP.
United HealthCare and Cigna did not immediately respond to requests for
comment. Kaiser Permanente, which is not affiliated with Kaiser Health News,
said it has a process to address denials based on gender. Aetna said it has a
process to cover these claims and is working to delink services from gender
identification.
The challenges with insurers lead some transgender people to forego an insurance plan altogether or to stick to their
birth gender on their insurance ID cards.
Eli Strong started transitioning from female to male before passage of the
Affordable Care Act, while he lived in Washington, D.C. and had employer-based
coverage. In 2008, he changed all his legal identification to male, but kept his
health insurance ID as female, because he had not yet gotten a hysterectomy. He
didnft want to have to fight his insurer over a gynecological exam.
gI was afraid that my insurance company wouldnft cover annual exams, or
anything having to do with organs that insurance companies deemed as non-male,h
Strong said. gI resented having to keep my insurance marker as female because
the way I saw it, that simple marker shouldnft determine what coverage I
received. What should determine my coverage is whatever organs I currently have,
or conditions I am diagnosed with.h
Strong finally changed his insurance ID to male in 2014 after having a
hysterectomy. But some of his transgender friends have not had as easy a time
navigating the system. Others, he said, changed their insurance IDs to their new
gender and contacted their insurance companies after a claim was denied to
explain their transgender status, with limited success.
Insurance difficulties can create additional anxiety for people already
fearful about seeking health care. Strong said that before his hysterectomy, gI
put off having annual [gynecological] exams c because it was also so incredibly
uncomfortable to be a bearded man in a gynecologistfs office.h
gMost transgender men still have a cervix, so they need a pap smear, so you
have to create an environment where they feel comfortable talking about
themselves,h said Harvey Makadon, director of professional education and
training at Fenway Community Health, a LGBT health center in Boston.
Meanwhile, the insurance industry argues the responsibility for clarifying
health service needs should fall to the health care provider, arguing that the
doctor can explain the patient is transgender in the notes section of a
submitted claim.
But that doesnft always work, says Dru Levasseur of the Transgender Rights Project at Lambda Legal.
Most insurance billing systems are automated and reproductive services like
mammograms and prostate exams are flagged with a corresponding gfemaleh or
gmale.h
Levasseur says the service is denied automatically if the gender and service
donft match. To allow payment, he and others say, an insurer could put a hold on
the claim, verify it with the health care provider and then manually override
the code. gThe onus should be on the insurance companies,h Levasseur said.
Medicare already has codes that allow providers to identify the person
getting, say, a pap smear or a mammogram, as transgender, which allows the claim
to be processed, according to the AAPC, a trade group representing
physician-based medical coders. Transgender advocates and the AAPC say the same
can be done with private insurers.
But the gendered service claims system is there for a reason and changing it
is not as easy as flipping a switch, said Andrew Naugle, a consultant at
actuarial firm Milliman. The system, he explained, is part of quality control
mechanisms meant to filter out treatments that shouldnft happen, like a child
being prescribed a drug not deemed safe for that age group.
Though therefs no reliable data quantifying the relationship between the
coding issues and denials, Sarah MacCarthy, a RAND Corporation health researcher
said, gtherefs a lot of anecdotal evidence that itfs challenging to access
services, and if even if they are accessed, they continue to be of low quality.h
Some plans and providers say they are committed to changing that.
Deborah Espinal, executive director of health plan policy at Kaiser
Permanente, said her organization is intent on removing barriers to care. gWe
see many patients in transition that have a need for preventive services that
cross genders, and we work to ensure that KP is both socially and medically
sensitive to our transgender members before, during and after their transition,h
Espinal said.
Advocates say their goal is to add new categories, such as htransgender man,h
or gtransgender woman,h into insurance application forms, as well as into
research, to get a more accurate picture of the number of transgender people,
how many are denied coverage and how these denials affect health
outcomes.