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How to Get Therapy Approved by Insurance in Alaska

Getting therapy approved by insurance in Alaska usually comes down to three things: getting a diagnosis, documenting medical necessity, and using correct billing codes.

Alaska snapshot
Alaska mental health insurance landscape

Telehealth is essential for rural areas. Alaska Psychiatric Institute, Akeela Inc.

Full parity enforcement Medicaid expanded

Get a diagnosis first

Insurance pays for treatment of conditions, not for self-improvement. Your intake session establishes a diagnosis (depression, anxiety, etc.) that authorizes ongoing therapy.

Understand the CPT codes

90791 (intake/evaluation), 90834 (45-minute therapy), 90837 (60-minute therapy), 90847 (family/couples with patient). Your therapist handles these but knowing them helps you understand EOBs.

Pre-authorization

Some plans require pre-auth for ongoing therapy past a certain session count. Your therapist's office usually handles this, but ask specifically: 'Is pre-authorization required for my plan? Is it on file?'

Keep documentation

Save all EOBs, denial letters, and appeal correspondence. If insurance changes its mind later, you have a paper trail.

Letter of medical necessity

For any contested coverage, ask your therapist for a formal letter of medical necessity. It references DSM-5 criteria, your specific symptoms, treatment plan, and prognosis with/without therapy.

Alaska-specific

Telehealth is essential for rural areas. Alaska Psychiatric Institute, Akeela Inc.

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