Several
weeks ago, I wrote about my futile attempts to receive reimbursement for a
manual breast pump. I foolishly believed that once I faxed in the invoice with
the requested information, I would promptly receive the $25.99 I was promised.
So imagine my consternation when, several days later I received a check for $15
and a note explaining that the $10.40 had been covered by my “co-insurer.”
I found this
somewhat perplexing as I do not have co-insurance. Naturally, I called my
provider up and had the following conversation:
Me – Yes, I
sent in the paperwork for re-imbursement on a manual breast-pump and although
the invoice I provided said $25.99 you only cut me a check for $15.59 and
deducted $10.40 for the co-insurance I don’t have.
Them – That
is strange, let me look over the notes on your account. Do you mind if I place
you on a brief hold?
7 or 8
minutes pass
Them – It
would appear the system made an error and we are unable to override it at this
time.
Me – What do
you mean the “system” cannot be overridden? Do you have a Terminator 2 scenario
going on at the home office? Has the computer become self-aware? Are you under
duress?
Them – I
have spoken to my supervisor and while we cannot override the error, we can get
the amount corrected.
Me – Ok. So
now I will have to wait for another check for the $10.40 you deducted from the
original check?
Them –
Actually, we will need you to mail your check back to us and once we receive it
we can re-issue a check for the full $25.99.
Me – Why
can’t you just issue me a check for the difference? Better yet, just stop
payment on this check and I will shred it. I can send you the video.
Them – I
know it seems unnecessary, but we simply cannot issue you the full check until
we have yours back.
Me – What if
I said I had lost the check in a bar-fight or a structure fire?
Them – Is
that what happened?
Me- Let’s
just say that if my house was ablaze the first thing I grabbed would not be my
health insurance paperwork.
Them – Sir,
if you have the check you will have to return it.
Me – This
may seem petty, mostly because it is meant to be, but I am unwilling to suffer
the indignity of stopping and buying a stamp simply to return your mistake to
you. If you want the check back, you will have to send me a self-addressed
stamped envelope.
Them – May I
place you on a brief hold?
2 minutes
pass
Them – We
will send you a self-addressed envelope and you can return the check in it.
Me- I will
keep it in the fire-safe next to the jewels.
True to
their word, I received an envelope a week later. I placed the $15.59 check into
the mail on a Friday afternoon. The following Monday, I was sorting through
that day’s mail and saw an envelope from my insurance provider. I opened the
envelope to reveal a check for $10.40 and a form showing that with this check (and
the one they had demanded I return) they had now paid me the full $25.99 and
the claim was completed.
I may have
briefly lost consciousness at this point. I do remember my wife reminding me
that our infant daughter was slumbering nearby and that I would need to “take
it outside” if I wished to continue my outburst. I was beginning to suspect
that this company employed an entire department whose job it was to piss me
off. Not only had they issued the impossible check, they had sent it before
ever receiving my check back. I had spent hours of phone conversations for the
privilege of trading a $15 reimbursement check for a $10 one.
One of my
co-workers, who was familiar with my odyssey, found this turn of events so
amusing that he became incapacitated at his desk. So now I had to make yet
another phone call to the insurer and attempt to convince them to issue another
$15.59 check to replace the one I had dropped in the mail a few days prior. An
eerie calm washed over me as I dialed the number for customer service and
waited for the next available associate.
After
explaining the situation yet again, I was placed on another “brief” hold so
that he could review the extensive notations on my account.
Them – Thank
you for your patience. I am not sure why you were told to send the other check
back and we cannot re-issue that check because we do not show we have
possession of it yet. If we cancel it there would be a waiting period before we
could re-issue it so the best thing would be for us to wait for the check you
sent us to get here and have us send it back to you.
Here I found
myself at a crossroads: I could succumb to the mounting pressure in my cerebral
cortex and explain to “Jim” a unique location to store the check once it was
located, but I realized that such a suggestion would be unfair to him. Besides,
all of this would probably just create a mental health emergency on my part
which would in turn generate another claim which they would then deny thereby
creating an entirely new cycle of rage.
Instead, I
took a deep breath and came to terms with the fact that I was no match for the
institutionalized inefficiency woven into each and every step of the
reimbursement process. I was now entering the third month of simply attempting
to claim $25.99. I shudder to think of the man-hours wasted attempting to claim
a benefit advertised to me. I have received breakfast cereal rebates faster and
with less bureaucracy.
As of this
writing, I still have not received the full reimbursement for the product I purchased
at the beginning of January. I imagine that the end result of such a labyrinthine
process is to tout an impressive number of benefits without the financial inconvenience
of fulfilling them.
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