T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2314.1 | where is my pharmsy card? | STAR::ABBASI | iam your friendly psychic hotline | Fri Jan 08 1993 01:36 | 24 |
| .-1
i cant believe this, this just happen to me just 2 hours ago, i went
to the pharmacy here in Nashua to get a precipitation to make me see
better (my eyes become sensitive sometimes from allergy), iam in
the Harvard medical plane and i told to wait in line for 45 MINUTES only
to find then when the pharmacists did my card number on the computer that
it is EXPIRED! and the bill was too expensive for me to take care of at
this time (cant believe how expensive medicine is), so i have to
go again tommrrow , WHY HAVE WE NOT GOT OUR NEW CARDS YET ???
i had no idea iam using an expired card, i have no idea what card iam
suppose to use, i usually open my wallet get out all the cards and they
picked the one, any way, what is going on here??? we want our
cards please !!! sooon !!!
i bet what happend is that the person who print the cards for us was
TFSO'ed, that must be it.
is any one really listening to us?
thanks,
\nasser
|
2314.2 | I have not had any problems... | WHYNOW::NEWMAN | Alpha Personal Systems Marketing | Fri Jan 08 1993 15:13 | 7 |
| I have John Hancock Plan 2 insurance and have not had any
problems with prescriptions as of 1/1/93 (other than the
fact that the PCS copayment went up to $8.00 but we knew
about this).
I also use the EPS "mail order" drug program without any
problems
|
2314.3 | it was my mistake, holding on to old cards | STAR::ABBASI | iam your friendly psychic hotline | Fri Jan 08 1993 17:02 | 15 |
| i just called the Hancock digital number (DTN 223-3300) and i found
out what i did wrong, since i moved to harvard plane i should throw
away the Hancock prescription drug program card, i got confused, i
thought that was the card to use, they told me to use the
harvard community card the same one i use to see my doc (dr Myer) and
this same card i can use to the prescriptions.
so sorry about complaining in .2 i need to go find a wall now and bang
my head on it, so many cards i got confused.
life is hard.
but thank you for you help.
\nasser
|
2314.4 | | POBOX::RILEY | I *am* the D.J. | Sat Jan 09 1993 00:27 | 18 |
| To be basenoter...
Express Pharmacy Services (EPS) doesn't appear to be related in any way
to John Handcock.
What I did was to ask my personnel rep for an EPS application. The
application package outlines how your Dr. should write up the
prescriptions.
Send in the application along with your prescriptions and in about 10
working days the stuff will be express delivered to your address.
P.S. The EPS billing reflects your charge ($2) and what the "company
cost is". In my case a years supply of my current Rx will cost me
about $36, and the company cost over $10,000. Without this insurance,
my life expectancy will be greatly reduced!
"jackin' the house", Bob
|
2314.5 | medicne delays with Healthsource | ILUVNH::BADGER | One Happy camper ;-) | Mon Jan 11 1993 08:09 | 24 |
|
I switched from MTHP to Healthsource. I went to renew my prescription,
warned the pharmistis that I had new insurnace. She called up
Healthsource, and they knew nothing about me. No, I han'd recieved my
new card yet, but I expected to be about to get a phone ok.
The next morning I called Heathsource, they didn't know me either.
They blamed digital on late submission of forms. Said just for me to
pay any bills and I'd get reembursed as soon as the forms came in.
I don't now about you, but I've been to hospital emergency rooms
before, and if you don't have proof of insurnace, they kiss you off.
Not feeling too good about this, I get digital involeved. By
afternoon, I have an ID number. With ID in had, I went back to get
my presciption filled. NO GOOD. The number must be in the computer
system of a pharmacy network. a two week delay. But of course, if
I had a few hundred laying around, I could pay for the presciption
myself.
My own note to myself is that if I ever switch again, I will be after
new cards, IDs to be issued and ready by the 1st of Jan.
ed
|
2314.6 | This has become an annual ritual | TOOK::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG2-2/BB9 226-7570 | Fri Jan 15 1993 23:12 | 8 |
| There are times I wish the computer had never been invented. Life was so much
simpler when we could buy stuff without depending on computers in stores. This
"drug snafu" has become an annual winter ritual.
The only safe rule is to draw lots of cash from the ATM and bring it to the
pharmacy until you are SURE your health insurance is in the pharmacy's computer.
Of course, raising the cash can be a problem sometimes.
Re Jan. 1 purchase: sometimes the old card remains in effect several days
after Jan. 1.
|