Illinois’ largest health insurers have agreed to cover the cost of
administering swine flu vaccinations for all of their policyholders, state
insurance regulators announced Tuesday, October 27.
Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Illinois, UnitedHealthcare, Aetna and Cigna
are among the insurers that voluntarily will cover the full cost of the H1N1
vaccinations, the Illinois Department of Insurance said. The federal government
is picking up the tab for the vaccine itself, which is now available at some
local hospitals and is expected to be more widely distributed in coming
weeks.
Some local insurers had previously said they would cover swine flu vaccine
costs only for members whose policies covered vaccinations, which would have
excluded some policyholders. But in recent weeks, those insurers and others told
state regulators they would cover all of their members, including co-payments
and other out-of-pocket costs.
Combined, the eight insurers that have agreed to the coverage account for 80
percent of all Illinois residents who have private insurance, said Michael
McRaith, director of the Illinois Department of Insurance. The others include
Humana, Health Alliance, Unicare and PersonalCare.
Many smaller carriers also are likely to fully cover swine flu vaccination
costs, he said.
“Our concern was that some policyholders might have been deterred from
getting the vaccine because of the potential cost,” McRaith said. “We were
pleased to learn that the companies in fact were planning to cover all
costs.”
Filed by Mike Colias of
Crain’s
Chicago Business, a sister publication of Workforce
Management. To comment, e-mail
editors@workforce.com.
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