Getting emergency care with your POS plan
A medical emergency is a medical problem so serious that you have to get care right away or you could be permanently disabled or die.
Wherever you are, get help immediately
All care needed to treat a medical emergency will be included in your plan, but you may have to pay some out-of-pocket costs or share some of the costs with Priority Health. These amounts depend on whether you are in the Priority Health service area and if the emergency room you visit is in your provider network.
NOTE: If you go to an emergency room and it's not a medical emergency, your plan won't pay for the visit.
Call your PCP, if you have one
Call your primary care doctor or other primary health care provider's (PCP's) office as soon as possible, or have someone call for you if you are hospitalized.
- Your PCP needs to know about your emergency and should coordinate any follow-up and continuing care.
- Any follow-up care provided by an out-of-network provider will be covered at your out-of-network or "alternate" copayment/coinsurance.
- If you are hospitalized and your stay is no longer a medical emergency, Priority Health must approve your inpatient stay for the cost to be covered by your plan. Once you are stabilized Priority Health may require that you be transferred to an in-network facility.
Some examples of emergencies
- Injury to eyes or ears
- Trouble breathing after taking medication or being bitten by an insect
- A broken bone
- Chest or upper stomach pain
- Coughing up or throwing up blood
- Pain in the chest and one arm
- Bleeding that won't stop
- Poisoning or drug overdose
- Seizure
- Sudden dizziness or weakness
- Slurred speech
- Sudden difficulty seeing
Urgent/virtual/travel care
If you need care now, but it's not an emergency, try one of these options: