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Accepted Insurances

Insurances Accepted by Our Eye Center

If you don’t see your insurance listed, please give us a call as some insurances change throughout the year.

Contracted List of Insurances

A – C

  • Aetna
  • Anthem Blue Cross PPO – includes Carpenters, Pipe Trades, Western Growers, Pinnacles, Operating Eng, Pers Platinum, Monterey Culinary
  • Anthem Blue Cross- Covered California
  • Anthem Blue Cross- HMO (only for Coastal Plans- CAI)
  • Blue Shield Trio HMO/ Covered California
  • Blue Shield PPO- Includes: UABT (united ag), UFCW
  • Blue Shield Federal
  • BRMS – Network: Cigna/ Blue Cross
  • Central Alliance for Health- CCA  Requires: Authorization RAF Includes: IHSS plan- this plan is primary auth required
  • Cigna PPO
  • Coastal – Includes: SVMH/ CHOMP employee plan, TRIO HMO

D – N

  • Medicare Part B
  • Medicare Railroad
  • Medicare Replacement Plans – Includes: Aspire, Aetna, Humana, United Healthcare
  • Medi-Cal
  • NX Network

O – Z

  • Tricare – Includes: Prime- Auth required, Select- No Auth Required
  • Tricare for Life (Secondary to Medicare ONLY)
  • United Healthcare/ UMR- Select Plans
  • VSP (Vision Service Plan) – Vison Plan
  • Spectera (Vision Plan (ONLY through Taylor Farms United Healthcare)

Non Contracted List of Insurances

A – D

  • AARP (As a primary insurance)
  • Blue View Vision
  • Blue Cross Select/Gold Narrow Network
  • Cigna HMO
  • CCS- California Children Services
  • Champ VA

E – M

  • Eye Med
  • First Health
  • Health Net
  • Imperial Health Plan
  • Medicare Part A (Hospital Coverage Only)

N – Z

  • Pacific Health Alliance- PHA
  • PHCS- Private Healthcare Systems
  • Valley Health Plan
  • Western Growers CEDAR Plan Only

Note: If any insurance listed under non contract list and patient has Medicare we will bill the insurance. If any patient has a non contracted insurance we can still see patient if they have out of network benefits.

Any deductibles or co insurances are due at the time of services.

What are the differences between vision and medical insurance?

Insurance is complicated. It varies based on employer, age, and location, and unfortunately, no comprehensive guide exists to navigate it. Here is some information about the differences between medical and vision insurance and what to use when. Specifics will be dependent on your providers, but this should help you better distinguish between what’s available to you.

Vision vs Medical Insurance

Here are two scenarios:

  1. Your 8-year-old accidentally stabs himself in the eye with a pencil.
  2. Your glasses are scratched and you need a new pair with an updated prescription.

The first scenario is medical — medical insurance covers emergency care, surgery and eye conditions like glaucoma or infection. Though it might dip into eye health, it has no coverage for routine vision services, like an eye exam.

The second is vision — vision insurance is a bit of a misnomer. It’s not insurance so much as it is a benefit. It’s a supplemental, discounted program you pay into for preventive maintenance, so when it comes time for your eye exam, you have fewer and less expensive out-of-pocket costs. It doesn’t cover the treatment of diagnoses (like cataracts) but does cover the refraction portion and the wellness exam. Refraction is a vision test performed by your eye doctor to check if you need prescription lenses.

A typical vision plan includes a wellness eye exam, lenses, and an allowance for contacts, frames, or both. Instead of paying full-price at the time, you’re paying a discounted price each month. A vision plan can save you a few hundred dollars each year.

Vision Insurance Medical Insurance
Covers routine eye care services like eye exams and refractive services. Covers medical eye care services, such as management of eye diseases.
Benefits typically include an allowance toward glasses and/or contact lenses. Only covers materials if you have a Health Savings Account (HSA) or Flexible Spending Arrangement (FSA).
Benefit can only be used one time per calendar year or one time every other year. Benefit can only be used one time per calendar year or one time every other year.
Can be used multiple times throughout the year.

 

Learn More About Our Care and Financing Options

How Can I use Insurance for my Eye Exam?

You can get an annual eye exam using your medical insurance, but it would only include examining for eye conditions and would not cover a prescription for any type of corrective lenses. If you need both care for an eye condition as well as a wellness exam with refraction, you might have to make two different appointments because both insurances can legally not be billed for the same encounter. This can be avoided by paying out of pocket for your refraction and prescription. If you are only interested in getting a routine eye exam and refraction benefit from your vision insurance you will need to do both at the same time, on the same day, otherwise you’ll end up paying separately for both.

We encourage everyone to schedule an annual eye exam to catch eye conditions early and keep your eyes healthy. Visit the nearest Vantage Eye Center practice near you or call to schedule an appointment. If you’re unsure of whether you should use your vision or medical benefits, ask your eye doctor. They deal with both types of insurance every day and will help you with how best to get coverage.