Can my doctor/insurance company rightfully swing my medication lacking my consent?
My insurance company wanted to change my medication and get permission from my doctor but neither of them asked me anything I just found out when I go to pick up my meds and it was something completely different. Is that legal?
Answers:
I don't know, but change doctors, and complain (file a grievance) beside your insurance company.
In Pennsylvania, and many other states, your pharmacist may substitute a lower costing generic drug if one exists, unless your dr states " no substitutions" on the prescription proclaim.
Legal? Yes, and done all the time. If you don't want the generic, then you would be responsible for the difference contained by cost.Ad the difference in cost can be substantial.
Read the fine print contained by your insurance policy. I'm sure it's legal if they did it. They have so various different tiers for the medicines any more and they probably changed it to a less costly prescription that's supposed to serve the same purpose. If you have any different counterattack to the new med, contact your doctor and he can try to fight the insurance company on your behalf to allow the unproved one to be covered as an exception. That exception will have to be approved periodically by the insurance company.
Yes.
Related Questions:
Answers:
I don't know, but change doctors, and complain (file a grievance) beside your insurance company.
In Pennsylvania, and many other states, your pharmacist may substitute a lower costing generic drug if one exists, unless your dr states " no substitutions" on the prescription proclaim.
Legal? Yes, and done all the time. If you don't want the generic, then you would be responsible for the difference contained by cost.Ad the difference in cost can be substantial.
Read the fine print contained by your insurance policy. I'm sure it's legal if they did it. They have so various different tiers for the medicines any more and they probably changed it to a less costly prescription that's supposed to serve the same purpose. If you have any different counterattack to the new med, contact your doctor and he can try to fight the insurance company on your behalf to allow the unproved one to be covered as an exception. That exception will have to be approved periodically by the insurance company.
Yes.
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