Do you have to pay for medical treatment from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)? Will the VA treat you for medical conditions not related to your military service?
Most nonservice-connected veterans and noncompensable 0% service-connected veterans are required to complete an annual means test or to agree to pay VA the applicable copayment. The means test is based on their family's income and net worth. Some veterans are required to make copayments for their care and medications.
Veterans are requested to provide health insurance information. VA is required to submit claims to insurance carriers for treatment of all nonservice-connected conditions. Reimbursement received from insurance carriers are retained at the VA health care facility where treatment was received. These funds are used to provide additional health care services to all veterans.
Certain nonservice-connected and 0% noncompensable service-connected veterans are required to fill out the financial worksheet, which is known as a "Means Test." A means test is a gathering of financial information by which VA determines your priority group for enrollment, and whether or not you are required to make copayments for the service you receive. The means test is based on prior year income and net worth. However, you can apply for an exemption from paying those copayments to avoid a hardship if projections of your income for the current year will be substantially below the applicable income threshold.
If you don't want to complete the financial worksheet, you must agree to pay a copayment to the VA. This means that you accept placement in priority group 8 and are responsible for making the required copayments.
A hardship determination is a process by which veterans enrolled in Priority Group 7 & 8 may request a change in their enrollment priority group if their projected income for the current year will be substantially lower than their income from the previous year. Circumstances that might warrant hardship determination would be the loss of employment, business bankruptcy, or out-of-pocket medical expenses.
If you are receiving medical treatment from the VA, they will also provide necessary prescriptions. For more information on the current copayment rates, visit the Department of Veterans Affairs website. Service-connected veterans rated 50% or more, service-connected veterans receiving medications for a service-connected condition, or nonservice-connected veterans who meet the low-income criteria are exempt from the prescription copayment. This income threshold changes annually.
Whether or not you have insurance does not effect your eligibility for VA health care benefits.
If you are receiving care for a nonservice-connected condition and have health insurance, your insurance carrier will be billed. VA doesn't bill your health insurance carrier for service-connected disabilities.
The law requires VA to bill private health insurance companies for all nonservice-connected care a veteran receives. Additionally, if you are a veteran who is subject to a copayment and are receiving VA care for your non service connected disability, providing VA your insurance information lets VA submit a claim to your health insurance company, so maybe you won't be billed.
You will NOT be responsible for any unpaid balance that the insurance carrier does not pay except for VA copayments. In addition, many insurance companies will apply VA health care charges toward the satisfaction of your annual deductible.
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