For Aetna PPO and HMO members across California — including Amazon corporate, AWS, Whole Foods, Twitch, and broader CVS Health employer-group plans. We verify your Aetna benefits at no cost, file prior authorization, and advocate through peer-to-peer review and California Independent Medical Review when the level of care your clinical assessment supports is challenged.
In most cases, yes. Aetna — a CVS Health subsidiary since 2018 — is one of the largest commercial behavioral-health benefit administrators in the United States. Most Aetna PPO and HMO plans cover medical detox, residential treatment, MAT, partial hospitalization, intensive outpatient, and structured aftercare. If you’re an Amazon employee or a dependent of one, your plan is most likely an Aetna PPO administered through Amazon’s benefits portal — coverage for substance-use treatment is built into the standard Amazon medical plan. Our utilization-review team verifies your Aetna benefits at no cost and sends a written breakdown — covered levels of care, expected length-of-stay authorization, and any cost-sharing — typically within 30 minutes.
If your card lists Aetna or Aetna Better Health, with or without “CVS Health” branding, this is the verification path that applies to you.
Most Aetna-administered plans cover the levels of care across the substance-use treatment continuum. Specifics depend on your plan tier (PPO, HMO, EPO) and any prior-authorization requirements your employer group has set. Typical authorization windows we see:
Specific authorization length depends on your plan, the clinical assessment at intake, and concurrent-review decisions Aetna’s utilization-management team makes during your stay. Clinical documentation supporting medical necessity is filed at every review interval.
Insurance covers the level of care. The facility decides what the level of care actually delivers. Amazon employees and other professionals on Aetna PPO arrive with specific work, life, and timing constraints — return-to-office expectations, performance-review cycles, FMLA paperwork, manager confidentiality. The clinical work has to fit alongside that reality.
Authorization gets you in the door. The clinical, family, and aftercare work decides whether you stay out.
Aetna utilization management runs concurrent-review windows on a 5-to-7-day cadence for residential stays. Aetna Behavioral Health, the carrier’s behavioral-health arm, handles the medical-necessity reviews. Our utilization-review and billing team handles the full cycle — from initial verification through California Independent Medical Review if needed.
The decision to escalate is not commercial. It’s clinical. When a client is denied care that’s clinically indicated, we advocate for them — through every step above — to support coverage of the level of care our team believes is medically appropriate.
Two pieces of law shape what Aetna — or any commercial behavioral-health carrier — is required to cover for California residents.
When we appeal an Aetna denial, the appeal is built on the clinical documentation and the law. Both sides matter.
A 28-day inpatient model isn’t the clinical recommendation. It’s the legacy insurance benefit. The National Institute on Drug Abuse, summarizing decades of research in its Principles of Effective Treatment, states that participation in treatment for less than 90 days is of limited effectiveness for most substance-use disorders, and that better outcomes are associated with longer durations of treatment. This includes time across the full continuum — detox, residential, PHP, IOP, and continuing care.
This is why we build for length-of-stay flexibility. Some Aetna members — Amazon employees in particular — need a focused inpatient stay because of return-to-office timing or operational windows, then continue at PHP or IOP. Others — those with severe withdrawal risk, complex psychiatric comorbidity, or chronic relapse history — need extended residential care. The right length of stay is a clinical decision, not a calendar decision.
When concurrent review tries to cut a stay short, our UR and medical teams document the clinical reasoning, file the peer-to-peer request, and pursue appeals — including California IMR — when warranted.
Aetna is a top-five US commercial carrier with broad coverage across employer groups, individual plans, and Medicare Advantage. Some of the populations whose plans we commonly verify:
If your card lists Aetna with any group prefix or affiliation, our UR team can walk through the verification with you — including confirmation of which Aetna plan structure applies to your employer.
Three steps. No commitment.
In most cases, yes. Amazon’s standard medical plan is administered by Aetna PPO and covers substance-use treatment under MHPAEA parity requirements. Coverage typically includes medical detox, residential treatment, MAT, PHP, IOP, and aftercare. Our UR team verifies the specifics of your Amazon-Aetna plan before admission.
Yes. Most Aetna commercial plans cover substance-use treatment in California, with cost-sharing that depends on whether your plan is PPO (broader out-of-network coverage) or HMO (narrower network rules). California’s SB 855 requires state-regulated commercial plans to cover medically necessary treatment for substance-use disorders.
Most Aetna plans cover medical detox when medically indicated. Authorization windows we typically see are 3 to 12 days, depending on substance, withdrawal severity, and medical or psychiatric complexity. Coverage depends on your specific plan and prior-authorization requirements.
Most Aetna PPO and HMO plans require prior authorization for medical detox and residential admission. Our UR team files the prior-auth request with the clinical documentation supporting medical necessity, typically before admission. You don’t handle the prior-auth process yourself.
Our medical director conducts a peer-to-peer review with Aetna’s medical director. If the denial holds, we file Level-1 and Level-2 internal appeals. When internal appeals are exhausted, we handle external appeals — California Independent Medical Review for state-regulated plans, or ERISA-track external review for self-funded employer plans (common with large employers like Amazon). The IMR reviewer’s decision is binding on Aetna.
Most Aetna PPO plans include out-of-network coverage, with different cost-sharing than in-network. Specific cost-sharing — deductibles, coinsurance percentages, out-of-pocket maximums — depends on your plan year. We verify this before admission so there are no financial surprises.
Most Aetna plans cover MAT for opioid use disorder (buprenorphine, naltrexone) and alcohol use disorder (naltrexone, acamprosate) when prescribed as part of a clinical treatment plan. Aetna’s prescription benefit through CVS Caremark covers most standard MAT formulary lines.
Most Aetna plans cover treatment of co-occurring psychiatric conditions alongside substance-use treatment when both are clinically indicated, per federal MHPAEA parity requirements.
One call. Our UR team handles the Aetna verification end-to-end and reports back. Verification is free, confidential, and not a commitment to admit.
Aetna trademarks are the property of CVS Health Corporation; this page references them solely to discuss coverage. Amazon, AWS, Whole Foods Market, and Twitch are trademarks of their respective owners and are referenced for informational purposes only — Gev’s Recovery is not affiliated with or endorsed by any of these organizations. Insurance acceptance is subject to benefit verification. Treatment outcomes vary by individual; statements about the authorization, peer-to-peer, and appeals process describe Gev’s Recovery’s standard practices and do not guarantee specific coverage decisions by your plan. Gev’s Recovery Center · 19448 Lassen St, Northridge, CA 91324 · CA DHCS license #191288AP.