Insurance letter legalese translation needed please
Dear ....,
We reviewed your request to cover laparoscopic biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch for you. Based on the information submitted and your health benefit plan, we determined that the health care service is eligable for coverage.
The information in this letted does not guarentee payment or represent a treatment decision (those are made by your physician).
blah, blah, blah...
Sincerely,
.......
Am I approved??
All that was turned into ins. co last week (I checked with ins co to make sure). When I spoke with the first ins rep, all she wanted to say was "The doctor has notified us." Like I said in the earlier post..."I can notify your company that I'm have surgery but that doesn't mean your company will pay for it.
I hung up with her, called back and got someone more helpful who said I was approved and I should get the letter soon.
I am hoping it is this letter and that the letter says I am approved to get the surgery (and they will pay their portion.
It looks like an approval to me!
Back in 2000, after moving to CA, I had to take the CA bar exam, 8 years after taking the VA bar exam. I had pretty much "formatted C:" in the interim regarding anything that didn't apply to patent law (or VA domestic relations law), and of course had not studied CA law. While I was taking the 8 week bar review course (at night, while working full time), I was having IBS issues and a CT scan showed a suspicious cyst on my ovary. I had to chose whether to have surgery THEN, and skip the bar exam, or wait until after the exam. I chose to wait, and was needless to say, quite distracted during my studying, and had serious concerns about whether I was up for taking it with so little preparation (many people study full time for the exam for 2 months - I didn't study outside of the bar review class, because I didn't have time, up until the last 10 days or so).
The exam was in February. The results came out online at 6 PM the Friday of Memorial Day weekend. That happened to be the weekend of my 25th college reunion back east - so, by 9 PM east coast time, I was two-1/2 sheets to the wind, enjoying ****tails and wine with dinner and more booze afterwards. At 8:50, I grabbed one of my best friends from college, who is an MD, another glass of wine, and hoisted myself up to the 4th floor of the dorm (no elevator) that they had stuck me in (I was around 275 lbs then), and logged on over the phone modem. I had my card with my password, and when the slooooow system finally let me enter it, I got the following message:
"[MyName]'s name is on the list of people who successfully took took the February 2000 CA Bar Exam."
OK, I know I'm tipsy, but I am looking for TWO WORDS: "Congratulations" and "Passed." Those two words are NOT in that sentence!! I look at my friend and asked her - "I KNOW I successfully SAT through the exam - but did I pass the damned thing or not?" We both read it multiple times - both Ivy-educated, three doctoral degrees between us - and still could not be sure. I finally decided to believe I passed the exam and headed back downstairs for more booze.
Why can these people not READ what they wrote, and pay attention to the fact that ambiguity is NOT a good thing under the cir****tances??
I hope it is in November (thought I'd prefer October), because I want to make sure I'm out of the hospital by my sons' birthday in December! ....you know, in case (heaven forbid) there would be any complications.
Since ins approved 12/5 to 12/6, I assume once I get into the hosp and get surgery, he will ask insurance for more days? Or will I really be home the next day?