Our insurance won't pay for vitamins, but his medical card will. His medical card, otoh, won't pay for Prevacid solutabs, so we just pay the co-pay after our insurance covers them. We had his medical card reject his TOBI last month. Because his medical card is an adoption subsidy, we have no PCP nor case manager, thus no one to ask questions TO and find out why they rejected his TOBI.
We are VERY fortunate. M has a medical card under his adoption subsidy. We are not obligated to use our primary insurance. However, we find that using our private insurance as primary and medicaid as secondary tends to cut through medicaid's red tape most of the time. And, having Medicaid as secondary often cuts through private insurance red tape.
Then again, after paying for a severe Hemophiliac for the last 3 years, I think our primary insurance has just raised the white flag on our family. Believe it or not, Hemophilia trumps CF on medical costs. Its about twice as expensive to treat Hemophilia than CF every month. And, surgical interventions only increase that difference. Our other son's Port surgery, which was an overnight procedure, cost our insurance $85,000. M's entire week in the hospital and all his testing didn't even come close to that cost. So, as I said, I think our insurance has raised the white flag on us.
Although, they did TRY yet again to hassle us. When they got charged by a Liver Transplant specialist, they suddenly demanded to know 1)whether he had other insurance and 2)whether he had insurance coverage for the last 12 months. We had to correct them 3 times that niether was relevant and niether would permit them to reject his medical costs because he's an adoptive placement and Federal law doesn't allow them to not cover him. Sucks to be them. But, we put up with a mediocre job in large part because of the kick-rear health insurance for the kiddos!