Guest guest Posted March 15, 2006 Report Share Posted March 15, 2006 , It seems to matter not just who your insurer is , but whether your doctor will go to bat for you about letting you do the shots at home. Mine is blue cross of MA and with my doctor's approval, they've been letting me do it at home. Meryl I've been on Xolair five months now and it has revolutionized my life. I've dropped six prescriptions and feel better than any time in the last six years. I receive my injections at Yale New Haven Hospital every two weeks and they are fully covered by Medicare and AARP Medicare supplement as long as I get them at the hospital. Un fortunately it is a 45 Minute drive and I have to miss several hours at my office and deal with snow traffic etc. I would prefer to give my own injections and it is time to select an insurance company under the new medicare prescription plan. Do any of you have suggestions as to which of the many company's that cover xolair is the easiest to deal with .. Thanks, __________________________________________________ Do You ? Tired of spam? has the best spam protection around Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2006 Report Share Posted March 15, 2006 - thank you for sharing your great news with the group! That is terrific. I have had two versions of Blue Cross in NC, both of which have covered my Xolair scrip either in full or about 95%. I am now getting it to my home. Ask your human resources person if you can speak directly with the reps of the potential health insurance companies, or contact your specialty pharmacy and see if they can tell you. Addy > > I've been on Xolair five months now and it has revolutionized my life. I've dropped six prescriptions and feel better than any time in the last six years. I receive my injections at Yale New Haven Hospital every two weeks and they are fully covered by Medicare and AARP Medicare supplement as long as I get them at the hospital. Un fortunately it is a 45 Minute drive and I have to miss several hours at my office and deal with snow traffic etc. I would prefer to give my own injections and it is time to select an insurance company under the new medicare prescription plan. Do any of you have suggestions as to which of the many company's that cover xolair is the easiest to deal with . Thanks, > __________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 The decision to inject yourself at home is probably up to your doctor, not your insurance company. I asked my doctor if I could inject myself and he said his malpractice insurance wouldn't allow it. Fortunately, I only have a 15 min drive and it's actually nice for me to get out of the office/house once in a while so I really don't mind. If I could inject myself at home I would though. msbehavior@... wrote: , It seems to matter not just who your insurer is , but whether your doctor will go to bat for you about letting you do the shots at home. Mine is blue cross of MA and with my doctor's approval, they've been letting me do it at home. Meryl I've been on Xolair five months now and it has revolutionized my life. I've dropped six prescriptions and feel better than any time in the last six years. I receive my injections at Yale New Haven Hospital every two weeks and they are fully covered by Medicare and AARP Medicare supplement as long as I get them at the hospital. Un fortunately it is a 45 Minute drive and I have to miss several hours at my office and deal with snow traffic etc. I would prefer to give my own injections and it is time to select an insurance company under the new medicare prescription plan. Do any of you have suggestions as to which of the many company's that cover xolair is the easiest to deal with .. Thanks, __________________________________________________ Do You ? Tired of spam? has the best spam protection around Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 17, 2006 Report Share Posted March 17, 2006 I am on Medicare for disability and have a very good Medicare Part D prescription plan with United through AARP. I don't belong to AARP, just chose this prescription plan. However, Xolair is not covered under Part D because its now covered under Medicare Part B at 100% of the cost when my doctor buys the Xolair and gives the injection in his office. I don't pay anything for the Xolair itself except $20 to my doctor to cover the amount he pays to buy the Xolair but is not reimbursed by Medicare. It's incredible and I'm so grateful to have such excellent coverage for the Xolair. Fran > > I've been on Xolair five months now and it has revolutionized my life. I've dropped six prescriptions and feel better than any time in the last six years. I receive my injections at Yale New Haven Hospital every two weeks and they are fully covered by Medicare and AARP Medicare supplement as long as I get them at the hospital. Un fortunately it is a 45 Minute drive and I have to miss several hours at my office and deal with snow traffic etc. I would prefer to give my own injections and it is time to select an insurance company under the new medicare prescription plan. Do any of you have suggestions as to which of the many company's that cover xolair is the easiest to deal with . Thanks, > __________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2007 Report Share Posted June 20, 2007 Hi, I posted about medicare/aarp rx awhile ago and got sidetracked... your response has caught my attention. I've been having second thoughts about doing the xolair because of the out of pocket expense and percentage for the aarp catastrophic coverage. Your saying that it's now covered under Medicare Part B (is that the same as my duo-neb being covered under durable medical equipment?). How do I find out for sure? Where do I call for information? This may be the solution I was looking for. > > > > I've been on Xolair five months now and it has revolutionized my > life. I've dropped six prescriptions and feel better than any time in > the last six years. I receive my injections at Yale New Haven > Hospital every two weeks and they are fully covered by Medicare and > AARP Medicare supplement as long as I get them at the hospital. Un > fortunately it is a 45 Minute drive and I have to miss several hours > at my office and deal with snow traffic etc. I would prefer to give > my own injections and it is time to select an insurance company under > the new medicare prescription plan. Do any of you have suggestions > as to which of the many company's that cover xolair is the easiest > to deal with . Thanks, > > __________________________________________________ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 21, 2007 Report Share Posted June 21, 2007 You can call Medicare for confirmation. Also, your allergist's and pulmonologist's offices can confirm it for you. I'm on straight Medicare (no supplement) and Xolair is covered by my Medicare Part B with a 20% copay. Best of luck - hope this will work out for you. Fran > > > > > > I've been on Xolair five months now and it has revolutionized my > > life. I've dropped six prescriptions and feel better than any time in > > the last six years. I receive my injections at Yale New Haven > > Hospital every two weeks and they are fully covered by Medicare and > > AARP Medicare supplement as long as I get them at the hospital. Un > > fortunately it is a 45 Minute drive and I have to miss several hours > > at my office and deal with snow traffic etc. I would prefer to give > > my own injections and it is time to select an insurance company under > > the new medicare prescription plan. Do any of you have suggestions > > as to which of the many company's that cover xolair is the easiest > > to deal with . Thanks, > > > __________________________________________________ > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 21, 2007 Report Share Posted June 21, 2007 Hi Joy: Yes, it's the durable medical equipment part of the Medicare. Call them at the 800 Number. Kathy JoyCarol and <jclutterbuster@...> wrote: Hi, I posted about medicare/aarp rx awhile ago and got sidetracked... your response has caught my attention. I've been having second thoughts about doing the xolair because of the out of pocket expense and percentage for the aarp catastrophic coverage. Your saying that it's now covered under Medicare Part B (is that the same as my duo-neb being covered under durable medical equipment?). How do I find out for sure? Where do I call for information? This may be the solution I was looking for. > > > > I've been on Xolair five months now and it has revolutionized my > life. I've dropped six prescriptions and feel better than any time in > the last six years. I receive my injections at Yale New Haven > Hospital every two weeks and they are fully covered by Medicare and > AARP Medicare supplement as long as I get them at the hospital. Un > fortunately it is a 45 Minute drive and I have to miss several hours > at my office and deal with snow traffic etc. I would prefer to give > my own injections and it is time to select an insurance company under > the new medicare prescription plan. Do any of you have suggestions > as to which of the many company's that cover xolair is the easiest > to deal with . Thanks, > > __________________________________________________ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 22, 2007 Report Share Posted June 22, 2007 My Medicare billings for Xolair are categorized as chemotherapy, not durable medical equipment. Fran > > > > > > I've been on Xolair five months now and it has revolutionized my > > life. I've dropped six prescriptions and feel better than any time in > > the last six years. I receive my injections at Yale New Haven > > Hospital every two weeks and they are fully covered by Medicare and > > AARP Medicare supplement as long as I get them at the hospital. Un > > fortunately it is a 45 Minute drive and I have to miss several hours > > at my office and deal with snow traffic etc. I would prefer to give > > my own injections and it is time to select an insurance company under > > the new medicare prescription plan. Do any of you have suggestions > > as to which of the many company's that cover xolair is the easiest > > to deal with . Thanks, > > > __________________________________________________ > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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