During her annual OB-GYN visit, Callie Anderson asked about getting off the birth control pill.
鈥淲e decided the best option for me was an IUD,鈥 she said, referring to an intrauterine device, a long-acting, reversible type of birth control.
Anderson, 25, of Scranton, Pennsylvania, asked her doctor how much it might cost. At the time, she was working in a U.S. senator鈥檚 local office and was covered under her father鈥檚 insurance offered to retired state police.
鈥淪he told me that IUDs are almost universally covered under insurance but she would send out the prior authorization anyway,鈥 Anderson said.
She said she heard nothing more and assumed that meant it was covered.
After waiting months for an appointment, Anderson had the insertion procedure last March. She paid $25, her copay for an office visit, and everything went well.
鈥淚 was probably in the room itself for less than 10 minutes, including taking clothes on and off,鈥 she said.
Then the bill came.
The Medical Procedure
According to Planned Parenthood, IUDs and implantable birth control of its contraceptive services provided from October 2021 to September 2022, per the latest data available.
There are : copper, which Planned Parenthood says can protect against pregnancy for up to 12 years, and hormonal, which can last from three to eight years depending on the brand. Hormonal IUDs can prevent ovulation, and both types affect the movement of sperm, designed to stop them from reaching an egg.
A physician or other practitioner uses a tube to insert the IUD, passing it through the cervix and releasing it into the uterus.
Doctors often recommend over-the-counter drugs for insertion pain, a concern that prompts some patients to avoid IUDs. Last year, federal health officials recommended doctors discuss pain management with patients beforehand, including options such as lidocaine shots and topical anesthetics.
The Final Bill
$14,658: $117 for a pregnancy test, $9,862 for a Skyla IUD, $4,057 for 鈥渃linic service,鈥 plus $622 for the doctor鈥檚 services.
The Billing Problem: A 鈥楪randfathered鈥 Plan
Anderson got a rare glimpse of what can happen when insurance doesn鈥檛 cover contraception.
The Affordable Care Act requires health plans to offer preventive care, , without cost to the patient.
But Anderson鈥檚 plan doesn鈥檛 have to comply with the ACA. That鈥檚 because it鈥檚 considered a , meaning it existed before March 23, 2010, when President Barack Obama signed the ACA into law, and has not changed substantially since then.
It鈥檚 unclear how many Americans have such coverage. In its , 麻豆女优 estimated that about 14% of covered workers were still on 鈥済randfathered鈥 plans.
Anderson said she didn鈥檛 know that the plan was grandfathered 鈥 and that it did not cover IUDs 鈥 until she contacted her insurer after it denied payment. Her doctor with Geisinger, a in Pennsylvania, was in-network.
鈥淢y understanding was Geisinger would reach out to insurance and if there was an issue, they would tell me,鈥 she said.
Mike McMullen, a Geisinger spokesperson, said in an email to 麻豆女优 Health News that with most insurance plans, 鈥減rior authorization is not required for placing birth control devices, however, some insurers may require prior authorization for the procedure.鈥
He did not specify whether it is the health system鈥檚 policy to seek such authorizations for IUDs, nor did he comment on the amount charged.
The Pennsylvania State Troopers Association, which offers some retirees the plan that covered Anderson, did not respond to requests for comment. Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield, the insurer, referred questions to the state.
Dan Egan, communications director for the state鈥檚 Office of Administration, confirmed in an email that the insurance plan is a grandfathered plan 鈥渇or former Pennsylvania State Troopers Association members who retired prior to January 13, 2018.鈥
for the plan identifies it as grandfathered and lists a variety of excluded services. Among them are 鈥渃ontraceptive devices, implants, injections and all related services.鈥
The $14,658 bill, an amount that typically would be negotiated down by an insurer, was solely Anderson鈥檚 responsibility.
鈥淔ourteen thousand dollars is astronomical. I鈥檝e never heard of anything that high鈥 for an IUD, said Danika Severino Wynn, vice president for care and access at the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.
Costs for IUDs vary, depending on the type, where the patient lives, insurance status, the availability of financial assistance, and additional medical factors, Severino Wynn said.
She said most insurers cover the devices, but coverage can vary, too. For instance, some cover only certain types or brands of contraceptives. Generally, an IUD insertion costs $500 to $1,500, she added.
Many providers, including Planned Parenthood, have sliding-scale rates based on income or can set up payment plans for cash-paying or underinsured patients, she said.
According to , a cost estimation tool that uses claims data, an uninsured patient in the Scranton area could expect to be charged $1,183 for an IUD insertion done at an ambulatory surgery center or $4,319 in a hospital outpatient clinic.

The Resolution
Anderson texted and called her insurer and Geisinger multiple times, spending hours on the phone. 鈥淚 am appalled that no one at Geisinger checked my insurance,鈥 she wrote in one message with staff at her doctor鈥檚 office.
She said she felt rebuffed when she asked billing representatives about financial assistance, even after noting the bill was more than 20% of her annual income.
鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 in therapy at the time, but at the end of this I ended up going to therapy because I was stressed out,鈥 she said. The billing office, she said, 鈥渢old me that if I didn鈥檛 pay in 90 days, it would go to collections, and that was scary to me.鈥
Eventually, she was put in touch with Geisinger鈥檚 financial assistance office, which offered her a self-pay discount knocking $4,211 off the bill. But she still owed more than she could afford, Anderson said.
The final offer? She said a representative told her by phone that if she made one lump payment, Geisinger would give her half off the remaining charges.
She agreed, paying $5,236 in total.
The Takeaway
It鈥檚 always best to read your benefit booklet or call your insurer before you undergo a nonemergency medical procedure, to check whether there are any exclusions to coverage. In addition, call and speak with a representative. Ask what you might owe out-of-pocket for the procedure.
While it can be hard to know whether your plan is grandfathered under the ACA, it鈥檚 worth checking. Ask your insurance plan, your employer, or the retiree benefits office that offers your coverage. Ask where the plan deviates from ACA rules.
With birth control, 鈥渟ometimes you have to get really specific and say, 鈥業鈥檓 looking for this type of IUD,鈥欌 Severino Wynn said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 incredibly hard to be an advocate for yourself.鈥
Most insurance plans offer online calculators or other ways to learn ahead of time what patients will owe.
Be persistent in seeking discounts. Provider charges are almost always higher than what insurers would pay, because they are expected to negotiate lower rates.
Bill of the Month is a crowdsourced investigation by 麻豆女优 Health News and that dissects and explains medical bills.听Since 2018, this series has helped many patients and readers get their medical bills reduced, and it has been cited in statehouses, at the U.S. Capitol, and at the White House. Do you have a confusing or outrageous medical bill you want to share? Tell us about it!
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