Insurance · GEHA · FEHB · for federal employees

GEHA rehab coverage at Gev’s Recovery — for federal employees and retirees

For Government Employees Health Association (GEHA) members — federal employees, federal retirees, and dependents enrolled in GEHA’s Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) plans. GEHA is governed by federal OPM rules rather than state insurance law, and the appeals process runs through OPM’s Federal Employees Health Benefits Act framework. We verify your GEHA benefits at no cost, file prior authorization, and advocate through OPM disputed-claims review when the level of care your clinical assessment supports is challenged.

▸ Verify your GEHA benefitsCall (844) 501-5005

Does GEHA cover rehab for federal employees?

In most cases, yes. GEHA — the Government Employees Health Association — is one of the largest non-postal FEHB carriers, covering federal employees, retirees, and dependents nationwide through its FEHB-program plans. GEHA offers two FEHB lines: GEHA Standard / GEHA High plans and GEHA Connection Dental Plus. The medical-side FEHB plans cover medical detox, residential treatment, MAT, partial hospitalization, intensive outpatient, and structured aftercare. Federal employees receiving SUD treatment also benefit from federal-employee FMLA protections and the Office of Personnel Management’s specific appeals framework. Our utilization-review team verifies your GEHA benefits and walks through the FEHB-specific authorization and appeals path.

If your card lists GEHA, GEHA Health, or references the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHB or FEHBP), this is the verification path that applies to you.

What GEHA FEHB plans typically cover

GEHA’s FEHB plans operate under the regulatory framework set by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). FEHB plans must meet federal coverage minimums for substance-use treatment and apply MHPAEA-aligned parity rules. Typical authorization windows we see:

  • Medical detox — 3 to 14 days, depending on substance, withdrawal severity, and medical or psychiatric complexity. GEHA applies FEHB medical-necessity criteria; specific authorization rules vary by GEHA plan tier (Standard vs High vs HDHP).
  • Residential / inpatient (ASAM Level 3.5) — initial authorizations of 14 to 28 days are common for GEHA FEHB plans, with concurrent reviews evaluating continued stay every 5 to 7 days.
  • Partial hospitalization (PHP, ASAM Level 2.5) — typically 4 to 6 weeks of structured day treatment, five days a week.
  • Intensive outpatient at ASAM Level 2.1 — 4 to 8 weeks of group, individual, and family work scheduled around your week.
  • Medication-assisted treatment (MAT) — buprenorphine for opioid use disorder, naltrexone for alcohol or opioid use disorder, acamprosate for alcohol craving. GEHA’s prescription benefit (administered by CVS Caremark on most GEHA plans) covers most standard MAT formulary lines per FEHB rules.
  • Dual-diagnosis psychiatric care — for co-occurring depression, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar, or trauma. Treated concurrently — the depression that drove the drinking doesn’t wait for the drinking to stop.
  • Aftercare coordination — sober-living placement when indicated, continued therapy, continued case management, and direct handoffs to GEHA-network outpatient providers.

Specific authorization length depends on your GEHA plan tier, the clinical assessment at intake, and concurrent-review decisions GEHA’s UM team makes during your stay. Medical necessity is built into the file from intake through discharge planning.

Why Gev’s Recovery is built for federal employees on GEHA

Coverage is the door; the clinical work happens after you walk through it. Federal employees on GEHA arrive with specific work, life, and timing constraints — federal-employee FMLA, security-clearance medical-review concerns for some roles, fitness-for-duty processes, and the structural reality of federal job-protection rules. The clinical work has to fit alongside that reality.

  • Joint Commission accredited. ASAM Levels 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, and 3.5 in-house. CA DHCS license #191288AP.
  • Medical Director: Eric Chaghouri, MD. Board-certified psychiatrist with subspecialty training in forensic psychiatry — particularly relevant for federal-employee security-clearance medical evaluations, fitness-for-duty determinations, and the federal-employee FMLA paperwork your agency HR specialist needs. UCLA undergrad, Keck School of Medicine of USC, LAC+USC residency, USC Institute of Psychiatry and Law fellowship. Clinical Faculty at USC. Clinical oversight is direct, not delegated.
  • Low staff-to-client ratio across clinical, medical, and case-management staff.
  • Evidence-based therapy core: CBT, DBT, EMDR, motivational interviewing, group therapy, MAT — supported by complementary modalities that work alongside the clinical work.
  • Length-of-stay flexibility. Shorter inpatient programs for federal employees with leave-balance, return-to-duty, or operational-readiness constraints. Longer stays for complex medical or psychiatric cases. Treatment length is built around the client, not the calendar.
  • Structured family program. Family sessions, couples therapy, family-systems work, with virtual options for spouses and dependents in the federal-employee’s home duty station.
  • Detailed aftercare with federal-employer coordination. Sober-living placement when indicated, continued therapy, continued case management, plus federal-employee FMLA documentation, return-to-duty clearance support, and security-clearance-relevant medical reporting where requested.

What GEHA pays for and what actually changes a person’s life are not the same equation. We work the second one.

How we work with GEHA on your coverage

GEHA’s substance-use utilization management runs through GEHA’s behavioral-health team using FEHB-aligned medical-necessity criteria. The appeals process is fundamentally different from commercial-PPO carriers — federal-employee benefit denials route through OPM’s disputed-claims review framework, not through state insurance regulators. Our utilization-review and billing team handles the GEHA cycle from intake through OPM appeal.

GEHA FEHB plan verificationOur UR team identifies your specific GEHA plan tier — GEHA Standard, GEHA High Option, GEHA HDHP, or GEHA Elevate — each having different in-network and out-of-network cost-sharing structures. The verification packet covers covered levels of care, prior-authorization triggers, in-network vs out-of-network cost-sharing, FEHB self-only vs self-plus-one vs self-and-family premium structure, and any CVS Caremark coordination for MAT prescription benefits. Within about 30 minutes you have a written summary of what’s covered, the prior-auth requirements, and any cost-sharing.
Prior authorization with GEHA UMFor medical detox and ASAM Level 3.5 residential admission, GEHA requires prior authorization filed through their behavioral-health UM intake. Clinical documentation includes substance-use history, withdrawal-risk assessment, prior treatment episodes, co-occurring psychiatric conditions with ICD-10 coding, ASAM 3.5 dimensional assessment, and the medical-necessity recommendation from our medical and clinical teams. For federal employees, the prior-auth filing also includes any agency-specific FMLA timing context where the member has authorized us to coordinate.
Concurrent review with GEHAOnce admitted, GEHA schedules concurrent reviews on a 5-to-7-day cadence for residential. Our UR team submits clinical updates aligned with FEHB medical-necessity standards. When concurrent review tries to step a client down to a lower level of care before clinical readiness, we counter with continued-residential reasoning grounded in the ASAM 3.5 dimensions still requiring residential intensity.
Peer-to-peer review with GEHA’s medical directorWhen GEHA denies continued care, Dr. Chaghouri conducts the peer-to-peer review. The conversation cites FEHB coverage-policy language, ASAM 3.5 dimensional reasoning, and any agency-specific clinical context (security-clearance medical-review implications, return-to-duty readiness, fitness-for-duty considerations) where relevant. Forensic and psychiatric credentials matter especially for federal-employee cases.
Internal appeals — GEHA’s two-level structureIf peer-to-peer doesn’t reverse the denial, we file Level-1 internal reconsideration with GEHA. If Level-1 is denied, the Level-2 appeal goes to a different GEHA medical-review team for fresh consideration with full supplemental documentation rights. GEHA’s appeals timeline aligns with FEHB requirements.
External appeal — OPM disputed-claims reviewFor federal-employee benefit denials, the external-review pathway is fundamentally different from commercial insurance. After exhausting GEHA’s internal appeals, we file a disputed-claims request with the Office of Personnel Management — the federal agency that regulates FEHB carriers. OPM reviewers evaluate whether GEHA’s denial complied with the plan’s published FEHB brochure terms and federal MHPAEA requirements. OPM’s disputed-claims decision is binding on GEHA. Beyond OPM, federal-employee members can pursue federal court review under FEHBA (the Federal Employees Health Benefits Act).

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.

The legal framework behind your GEHA coverage

GEHA is governed by federal law unique to the FEHB program — state insurance law generally does not apply.

Federal: the Federal Employees Health Benefits Act (FEHBA, 1959)FEHBA is the federal statute that created the FEHB program and governs all FEHB carriers including GEHA. The program is administered by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). FEHB plans must meet federal coverage minimums for substance-use treatment, follow OPM-specified medical-necessity standards, and use OPM’s disputed-claims review process for benefit denials.
Federal: the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA, 2008)MHPAEA applies to FEHB carriers including GEHA. Plans must apply financial requirements and treatment limitations to mental-health/SUD benefits no more stringently than to medical/surgical benefits.
OPM disputed-claims reviewOPM administers an independent review process for federal-employee benefit denials. After exhausting GEHA’s internal appeals, federal employees can file a disputed-claims request with OPM. OPM’s decision is binding on GEHA. Beyond OPM, federal court review under FEHBA is available. State insurance regulators do not have jurisdiction over FEHB carriers like GEHA.

When we appeal a GEHA denial, the appeal is built on the clinical documentation, the GEHA FEHB brochure provisions, federal MHPAEA, and FEHBA. All of these matter.

What the research says about length of stay

Industry standard says 28 days. The clinical literature on substance-use treatment outcomes says something different. 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 matters for federal employees on GEHA. Federal employees often arrive with significant career and security-clearance considerations that affect their willingness or ability to commit to extended residential treatment. The clinical-necessity case for extended residential — where indicated — leans on the NIDA evidence plus GEHA’s own FEHB brochure provisions for medically-necessary extended authorization.

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 OPM disputed-claims review — when warranted.

Who has GEHA coverage we commonly verify

GEHA serves federal employees, retirees, and dependents across the federal government. Some of the populations whose plans we commonly verify:

  • Federal civilian employees — staff at federal departments and agencies (DOD civilian, VA, HHS, DOJ, DHS, Treasury, etc.) enrolled in GEHA FEHB plans
  • U.S. Postal Service employees — USPS employees and retirees with GEHA coverage
  • Federal retirees — annuitants who continued GEHA coverage into retirement; often Medicare-coordinated
  • Federal employee dependents — spouses, domestic partners, and dependent children covered under self-plus-one or self-and-family GEHA plans
  • Tribal employees with FEHB — some Tribal employees enrolled in FEHB through their employer agencies
  • D.C. government employees — D.C. employees with FEHB-equivalent coverage

If your card lists GEHA or references FEHB / FEHBP / OPM, our UR team can walk through the verification with you — including identification of which GEHA plan tier applies and any agency-specific coordination needs.

How to verify your GEHA benefits

Three steps. No commitment.

1. Call (844) 501-5005 or submit the contact formEither path connects you with our admissions and UR team. Calls are answered 24 hours a day. Federal employees, retirees, family members, and federal-agency Employee Assistance Program (EAP) coordinators inquiring on behalf of an employee are all welcome.
2. We verify benefits with GEHA directlyOur UR team contacts GEHA using your member ID and FEHB plan code, identifies your specific GEHA plan tier, and pulls a written breakdown of your specific plan, including covered levels of care, prior-authorization requirements, expected length-of-stay authorization, and any in-network versus out-of-network cost-sharing.
3. The breakdown comes back to you in writing — usually inside half an hour, sometimes fasterNo commitment. The breakdown is yours to review with your family or your support system before any next step. Verification is free, confidential, and not a commitment to admit. Information is collected solely for benefit verification and is not shared with third parties — federal-employee privacy considerations are handled with HIPAA + Privacy Act protections.

GEHA rehab coverage — frequently asked questions

Does GEHA cover rehab for federal employees?

In most cases, yes. GEHA’s FEHB plans cover medical detox, residential treatment, MAT, PHP, IOP, and aftercare under FEHB program rules. Federal employees also benefit from federal-employee FMLA protections and the OPM disputed-claims review process for benefit denials.

What is FEHB and how does it relate to GEHA?

FEHB is the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program, the federal program that provides health coverage to federal employees, retirees, and their dependents. The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) administers the program. GEHA is one of the largest non-postal FEHB carriers, offering several FEHB plan tiers (Standard, High Option, HDHP, Elevate).

What is OPM disputed-claims review?

The Office of Personnel Management administers an independent review process for federal-employee FEHB benefit denials. After exhausting GEHA’s internal appeals, federal employees can file a disputed-claims request with OPM. OPM reviewers evaluate whether the denial complied with the plan’s published FEHB brochure terms and federal MHPAEA. OPM’s decision is binding on GEHA.

Does GEHA cover medical detox?

Most GEHA FEHB plans cover medical detox when medically indicated. Authorization windows we typically see are 3 to 14 days, depending on substance, withdrawal severity, and medical or psychiatric complexity.

How does federal-employee FMLA work with rehab?

Federal employees are entitled to FMLA leave for serious health conditions including substance-use treatment. The federal-employee FMLA process runs through the agency HR specialist; we provide the medical documentation the agency requires while keeping HIPAA and Privacy Act protections in place. For security-clearance considerations, we coordinate with the federal employee’s clearance-holding agency only when the employee specifically authorizes us to do so.

What happens if GEHA denies my coverage?

Our medical director conducts a peer-to-peer review with GEHA’s medical director. If the denial holds, we file Level-1 and Level-2 internal appeals citing FEHB coverage-policy language and federal MHPAEA. When internal appeals are exhausted, we file an OPM disputed-claims request — OPM’s decision is binding on GEHA. Beyond OPM, federal court review under FEHBA is available.

Does GEHA cover MAT (medication-assisted treatment)?

Most GEHA FEHB plans cover MAT for opioid use disorder (buprenorphine, naltrexone) and alcohol use disorder (naltrexone, acamprosate) when prescribed as part of a clinical treatment plan. GEHA’s prescription benefit is typically administered by CVS Caremark and covers standard MAT formulary lines.

Does GEHA cover dual-diagnosis treatment?

Most GEHA FEHB plans cover treatment of co-occurring psychiatric conditions alongside substance-use treatment when both are clinically indicated, per federal MHPAEA parity requirements applied to FEHB carriers.

Verify your GEHA FEHB benefits

Federal employees: call once. Our UR team handles the GEHA verification end-to-end and reports back. Verification is free, confidential, and federal-employee privacy considerations are handled with HIPAA and Privacy Act protections.

▸ Verify your GEHA benefitsCall (844) 501-5005

References to the Government Employees Health Association (GEHA), the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHB), the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), and the Federal Employees Health Benefits Act (FEHBA) are made for informational purposes only; we are not affiliated with or endorsed by any of these organizations or the federal government. 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.