Navigating health insurance with a disability can be frustrating, confusing, and exhausting. Insurance systems often create barriers to care, deny needed services, and require fighting just to get what you're entitled to.
This page centers disabled people's expertise navigating insurance systems and fighting for coverage.
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¶ Understanding Health Insurance
Disabled people often need more healthcare services, medications, equipment, and specialists than non-disabled people. Insurance determines whether these are affordable—or accessible at all.
Insurance systems can be barriers when they:
- Deny coverage for needed treatments
- Require prior authorization for everything
- Have limited provider networks
- Set arbitrary quantity limits
- Make appeals processes difficult
- Use "medical necessity" criteria that don't fit disability needs
In most systems, you have the right to:
- Appeal denied claims
- Get external review of denials
- Receive information about what's covered
- Not face discrimination based on disability
- Access covered benefits within reasonable timeframes
The US has a fragmented insurance system with multiple programs and private options.
Medicare: Federal health insurance for people 65+ and people who've received SSDI for 24 months, plus some others (ESRD, ALS).
Medicaid: Joint federal-state program for low-income individuals. Different in every state. Many disabled people qualify.
Dual Eligible: People with both Medicare and Medicaid. Often have complex needs and face coordination challenges.
Private Insurance: Through employers, ACA Marketplace, or direct purchase.
CHIP: Children's Health Insurance Program for children in families who earn too much for Medicaid but can't afford private insurance.
Veterans' Coverage: VA healthcare for eligible veterans.
TRICARE: Military health insurance for service members, retirees, and families.
Medicare Parts:
- Part A (Hospital): Covers inpatient hospital, skilled nursing facility (limited), hospice. Most people don't pay a premium.
- Part B (Medical): Covers doctors, outpatient care, durable medical equipment, preventive services. Monthly premium required.
- Part C (Medicare Advantage): Private plans that cover Parts A and B together, often with extra benefits. May have restrictions.
- Part D (Prescription Drugs): Drug coverage through private plans. Monthly premium; coverage gaps ("donut hole").
Medicare and Disability:
- Qualify after 24 months of SSDI (waiting period)
- ALS and ESRD have faster coverage
- May need supplemental coverage (Medigap) or Part D for gaps
What Medicare Covers for Disabled People:
- Durable medical equipment (wheelchairs, walkers, hospital beds)
- Skilled nursing (limited)
- Physical, occupational, speech therapy
- Mental health services
- Prescription drugs (Part D)
Limitations:
- No long-term care (nursing home or HCBS) beyond skilled nursing
- Prior authorization and medical necessity requirements
- Equipment has coverage rules (e.g., scooter vs. wheelchair criteria)
Medicaid varies dramatically by state but generally covers more than Medicare, including:
- Long-term services and supports (HCBS, nursing facilities)
- Personal care services
- Dental, vision, hearing (varies)
- Medical equipment and supplies
- Mental health and substance abuse treatment
Qualifying for Medicaid:
- SSI recipients are automatically eligible in most states
- Income and asset limits vary by state
- Some states expanded Medicaid under ACA; some didn't
- Medically needy/spend-down programs exist in some states
- HCBS waivers may have different eligibility rules
Medicaid Challenges:
- Low provider reimbursement means fewer providers accept it
- Waiting lists for waiver programs
- Coverage can be interrupted
- Complexity navigating the system
The Affordable Care Act created marketplaces for individual insurance:
- Cannot be denied for pre-existing conditions
- Must cover essential health benefits
- Subsidies available based on income
- Open enrollment period (November-January typically)
- Special enrollment periods for qualifying life events
Choosing a Plan:
- Consider total costs (premiums + deductibles + copays + coinsurance)
- Check if your providers are in-network
- Review formulary for your medications
- Understand prior authorization requirements
- Look at out-of-pocket maximum
Many plans require prior authorization—approval before receiving certain services or medications.
Tips:
- Know what requires prior authorization
- Submit requests with complete documentation
- Know appeal deadlines
- Ask providers to help with authorization
- Appeal denials (you have a right to appeal)
¶ Denied Claims and Appeals
If a claim is denied:
- Get the denial in writing with the reason
- Review your Evidence of Coverage/Summary of Benefits
- Gather supporting documentation
- File an internal appeal within the deadline
- If denied again, request an external review
- Consider getting help from a patient advocate
Your Rights:
- You have a right to appeal all denials
- External review is available for most plans
- State insurance departments can help with complaints
- Legal assistance may be available for significant denials
- SHIP (State Health Insurance Assistance Program): Free Medicare counseling
- State Medicaid offices: Help with Medicaid questions
- Health Insurance Marketplace: healthcare.gov or state marketplace
- Patient advocates: Many hospitals have patient advocates
- Legal Aid: Free legal help for low-income individuals
- Disability Rights organizations: Help with insurance denials
Canada has universal healthcare through provincial health insurance plans:
- Doctor visits and hospital care are covered
- Each province has its own plan (OHIP in Ontario, MSP in BC, etc.)
- Coverage details vary by province
Generally covered:
- Physician services
- Hospital services
- Some diagnostic tests
- Some therapies (varies)
Often not covered (require additional insurance):
- Prescription drugs (varies by province)
- Dental care
- Vision care
- Physiotherapy (beyond hospital)
- Assistive devices (often partial coverage)
- Medical equipment
Provincial Drug Plans: Some provinces have programs for high drug costs or specific conditions.
Assistive Devices Programs: Most provinces have programs to help cover medical equipment, but often with limits and waiting lists.
Home Care: Covered to varying degrees by provincial health systems.
Many Canadians have private insurance through:
- Employers (extended health benefits)
- Direct purchase
- Provincial plans for those without employer coverage
Private insurance may cover:
- Prescription drugs
- Dental and vision
- Paramedical services (physiotherapy, massage)
- Medical equipment not covered provincially
- Travel insurance
- Start with your provincial health plan for covered services
- Apply for provincial disability programs (Ontario Disability Support Program, etc.) which may include drug coverage
- Check if you qualify for special programs based on your condition
- Explore private insurance for gaps
- Contact disability organizations for help navigating
The National Health Service provides comprehensive healthcare:
- Free at the point of use
- Covers most medical needs
- Some services have waiting lists
Covered:
- GP services
- Hospital care
- Specialist services
- Mental health services
- Some therapies
- Maternity care
- Emergency care
May have charges or limits:
- Prescriptions (exemptions for many disabled people)
- Dental care (NHS dentists available but limited)
- Eye tests (free for some, including people with certain conditions)
- Some medical equipment
You may be exempt from prescription charges if you have:
- Certain medical conditions (epilepsy, diabetes requiring insulin, some others)
- A continuing physical disability
- Are on certain benefits
- Other qualifying conditions
Get an exemption certificate through your GP or NHS Business Services Authority.
For people with significant ongoing health needs:
- Fully funded by NHS
- Includes personal care and nursing care
- Complex application process
- Many people are denied and must appeal
- Register with a GP as your first point of contact
- Ask for referrals to specialists you need
- Request reasonable adjustments for appointments
- Know about NHS Continuing Healthcare if you have significant health needs
- Use patient advocacy services if you have complaints or access issues
- PALS (Patient Advice and Liaison Service) can help resolve concerns
Australia's Medicare covers:
- Free or subsidized GP visits
- Free public hospital treatment
- Subsidized specialist visits
- Subsidized tests and scans
PBS subsidizes prescription medications:
- Most medications have a maximum cost
- Concession card holders pay less
- Safety net thresholds provide additional help for high users
Many Australians have private health insurance:
- Reduces wait times for elective procedures
- May cover extras (dental, optical, physio)
- Medicare Levy Surcharge encourages higher earners to get private insurance
- Can cover some disability-related services
The National Disability Insurance Scheme covers disability supports (see other pages), but healthcare remains with Medicare:
- NDIS doesn't cover medical treatment
- NDIS may cover therapy for functional improvement
- Boundary between health and disability can be confusing
- Medicare for medical care
- PBS for medications
- NDIS for disability supports
- State health services for public hospital and community health
- Private insurance for gaps if you have it/can afford it
Different countries have:
- Universal healthcare (government provides)
- Social insurance (mandatory insurance through work or government)
- Private insurance (market-based)
- Combinations of the above
- Understand your country's system (public, private, or mixed)
- Know what disability-related services are covered
- Find out about special programs for disabled people
- Connect with disability organizations who can guide you
- Know your rights under national law
In many countries:
- Public healthcare is under-resourced
- Private healthcare is unaffordable for most
- Disability-related services are largely unavailable
- Informal care and community support fill gaps
- International NGOs may provide some services
Medical equipment (wheelchairs, communication devices, etc.) is often difficult to get covered:
- Requires documentation of "medical necessity"
- Often subject to prior authorization
- May have limits on types, brands, or features
- Appeals may be necessary
Tips: Get detailed prescription from specialist, document functional needs, appeal denials, work with equipment suppliers who know the system.
Finding specialists who take your insurance:
- Use insurance provider directory (but verify accuracy)
- Ask specialists' offices directly about insurance
- Consider out-of-network options if in-network isn't available (may require appeal for coverage)
- Telehealth may expand options
Mental health services should be covered comparably to medical services (in the US, under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act), but:
- Networks are often inadequate
- Prior authorization requirements may be stricter
- Denial rates are high
- Know your parity rights and file complaints when violated
Getting needed medications:
- Check formulary before prescribing
- Use generic alternatives when appropriate
- Appeal if preferred medication is denied
- Patient assistance programs may help with costs
- Know your plan's appeals process
Appeal the denial. Get detailed documentation from your provider about medical necessity. Include functional information about why you need specific features. Contact disability rights organizations for help. Many denials are overturned on appeal.
This is a common and serious problem. Document your search attempts. File a network adequacy complaint with your insurance and state insurance department. Consider out-of-network providers and request an exception. Use telehealth options.
¶ "I'm losing my job and will lose insurance"
Look into COBRA (expensive but continues coverage), ACA Marketplace (special enrollment when you lose job coverage), Medicaid (if income-eligible), or new employer's plan. Don't have a gap if possible—pre-existing conditions won't be denied coverage under ACA, but gaps can cause other problems.
Know what requires authorization. Submit requests proactively. Keep records of all authorizations. Appeal denials. If authorizations are routinely delayed, file complaints.
Check for generic options. Look into patient assistance programs from manufacturers. Investigate state pharmaceutical assistance programs. Ask about 340B pharmacies. Consider Canadian pharmacies (legal gray area in US). Use drug discount cards. Don't skip medications without talking to your doctor.
Health Access and other healthcare advocacy organizations work on insurance access.
Patient advocate organizations help individuals navigate the system.
Disability Rights organizations assist with insurance denials and discrimination.
National Health Law Program (NHeLP) works on healthcare access for low-income and underserved populations.
Have you navigated insurance systems as a disabled person? Won appeals? Found strategies that work?
Share your knowledge: Contribution Form
We especially welcome:
- Successful appeal strategies
- Tips for specific insurance types
- Information from countries not yet covered
- Experiences with disability-specific coverage issues
This page centers disabled people's expertise. Insurance navigation is a skill disabled people develop out of necessity—knowledge that should be shared.
Last updated: November 2025