

When he asked my secret, I happily replied, “Twitter.” So thank you, Twitter. I reported back to my insurance agent that my issue had been fixed. I will never again underestimate the power of social media and the one tweet that can possibly fix something no live customer service phone representative could. There I go, trying to use my common sense again. I should have started with social media instead of all those hours wasted on the phone. They were able to change my termination date to Aug. Within five hours of the direct message, I received a phone call from Covered California. I messaged back with, “This is not helpful.” To my surprise they asked for my name, birth date and phone number and replied they would escalate my case to their resolution team. Their automatic response appeared boilerplate, almost as if it came from a bot. I sent a direct message to Covered California, once again explaining my situation. I wasn't getting anywhere with my endless phone calls, with longer than average wait times, listening to the “soothing” hold music. After all the phone calls, complaints and grievances filed I assumed they wouldn't be able to help me either.Īfter stewing over this for a day, I decided I had nothing to lose but more time at this point. I immediately received a response tweeted back from each entity telling me to send a direct message for further assistance. The tweet said, “I hate health insurance billing issues. One tiny tweet, not even using all 280 allotted characters. In my frustration I sent out one tweet on Twitter. Then I contacted my insurance agent and even he couldn’t help me. The message I received back from them was encrypted so I couldn’t open it, which wasn’t helpful. The Department of Managed Healthcare suggested I file a complaint, which I did. Next, I called the insurance commissioner, who couldn’t help me, but kindly referred me to the Department of Managed Healthcare. I then called Blue Shield, who couldn’t help me. With this past-due bill in hand, I got on the phone and again called Covered California, who couldn’t help me. Apparently, I was supposed to know this, but my common sense got in the way. The termination date could not be changed because I called too late. I had hoped one plan would end and the other would begin with no lapses, no overlapping, no income tax issues regarding subsidies, but it just was not to be. I can’t have both policies simultaneously. I don’t need this Blue Shield policy anymore. That seemed fine until I received a bill from Blue Shield two weeks later for a past-due premium for the month of September.

The person who I spoke with at Covered California informed me I was supposed to give them two weeks’ notice prior to canceling I had waited too long and now they couldn’t terminate my plan until Sept. So my next call was to Covered California.

I started with a call to Blue Shield to cancel the policy only to be told I needed to cancel through the marketplace. But in my mind, I can’t risk any lapse in coverage when living with cancer. Apparently, my commonsense approach in waiting until the new coverage began to cancel my previous policy is not how it’s done. My first mistake was waiting until the day my new Medicare policy took effect to call and cancel my old policy. More specifically, nothing about living with metastatic breast cancer for over eight years has been simple. I have been stressing over this switch for a few months now and I have done everything in my power to ensure a smooth transition: making sure I have enough of my Lynparza (olaparib) on hand until I can get a refill, canceling the old plan and updating my new insurance information.Īlas, nothing is ever simple when it comes to health care and insurance. 1, my health insurance officially changed to Medicare from Covered California Blue Shield, my state’s marketplace insurance. One tweet calling out Covered California and Blue Shield of California about a problem with the termination date of my policy and my issue has been resolved. What emails and countless hours on the phone with multiple people could not accomplish has been fixed by Twitter. The power of social media and its role regarding health insurance has blown my mind.
