Insurance · Kaiser Permanente · closed-system · single-case agreement path

Kaiser Permanente rehab coverage at Gev’s Recovery — out-of-network and SCA path

For Kaiser Permanente members in California seeking substance-use treatment outside Kaiser’s facility network. Kaiser operates as a closed-system HMO — most care is delivered inside Kaiser’s owned facilities. We pursue Single-Case Agreements (SCAs) and Continuity of Care exceptions to secure out-of-network coverage at our Northridge facility when Kaiser’s internal network can’t deliver the level or quality of care your clinical assessment requires.

▸ Verify your Kaiser benefitsCall (844) 501-5005

Does Kaiser Permanente cover rehab outside Kaiser?

Sometimes — but not by default. Kaiser Permanente is a closed-system integrated health plan: Kaiser owns its own hospitals, medical offices, and clinical staff, and Kaiser’s standard benefit structure covers care delivered inside that network. Out-of-network treatment at facilities like Gev’s Recovery is generally not in the standard benefit. The pathways that do exist are Single-Case Agreement (SCA) — a one-off contract Kaiser negotiates with an out-of-network provider when in-network options are inadequate — and Continuity of Care exceptions when a member is mid-treatment with a non-Kaiser provider. Both pathways require clinical-necessity documentation and active negotiation with Kaiser’s UM team.

If your card lists Kaiser Permanente, Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, or KP, this is the verification path that applies to you.

What Kaiser plans typically cover (in-network) and what SCA can cover (out-of-network)

Inside Kaiser’s network, members have access to Kaiser’s own substance-use treatment programs — outpatient counseling, group therapy, MAT prescribing, intensive outpatient at Kaiser facilities, and inpatient detox or residential at Kaiser-contracted hospitals when Kaiser’s medical team determines it’s medically necessary. The structure is gatekept: a Kaiser primary care or behavioral-health provider typically must refer the member into the SUD treatment line.

Outside Kaiser’s network — at Gev’s Recovery or any non-Kaiser facility — coverage is contingent on either an SCA or a Continuity of Care exception:

  • Medical detox — covered via SCA when Kaiser’s in-network detox capacity is unavailable, when there’s a clinical reason Kaiser’s facility isn’t appropriate (geographic, family-systems, prior-treatment relationship), or when the member is already in active detox at a non-Kaiser facility (Continuity of Care).
  • Residential / inpatient (ASAM Level 3.5) — PHP (partial hospitalization, ASAM 2.5) — usually a 4-to-6 week stretch of full-day clinical and group programming, transitioning toward outpatient. Kaiser SCA coverage for residential is harder to obtain than for detox; the clinical case has to be specific.
  • PHP (ASAM 2.5) — Kaiser members can sometimes access non-Kaiser PHP via SCA when continuity from a residential admission is the clinical argument.
  • IOP (intensive outpatient, ASAM 2.1) — typically 9 to 12 hours of weekly clinical contact across 4 to 8 weeks, while you return to work or family. Kaiser usually wants step-down IOP back inside their network; non-Kaiser IOP via SCA is uncommon.
  • MAT — buprenorphine, naltrexone, acamprosate. Kaiser will typically prescribe MAT inside their network during active treatment; out-of-network prescription via SCA is unusual.
  • Dual-diagnosis psychiatric care — for co-occurring depression, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar, or trauma. Worked on at the same time as the substance use, because separating them is how people relapse.

Specific SCA outcomes depend on Kaiser’s UM determination, the strength of the clinical-necessity case, and the member’s existing relationship with Kaiser providers. Our team documents medical necessity at every checkpoint.

Why Gev’s Recovery is built for Kaiser members pursuing out-of-network care

Authorization tells you what’s covered; the program decides whether it works. Kaiser members pursuing non-Kaiser treatment have already concluded that Kaiser’s internal options are not the right fit — geographically, clinically, or for family-system reasons. The treatment center receiving them needs to be ready to negotiate with Kaiser, not just bill Kaiser.

  • 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 — relevant when a Kaiser member arrives with pending legal matters, FMLA paperwork, fitness-for-duty evaluations, or workers’-comp coordination questions. 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 members with employer or family timing 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 distant family members.
  • Detailed aftercare with Kaiser-side coordination. Direct handoffs back to Kaiser providers when the member returns to in-network outpatient care, sober-living placement when indicated, continued therapy, continued case management.

Authorization tells you what’s covered; the program decides whether it works.

How we work with Kaiser on Single-Case Agreements and out-of-network coverage

Kaiser SCA work is fundamentally different from commercial-PPO utilization management. There’s no standing in-network agreement to operate inside; every authorization is negotiated case-by-case. Our utilization-review and billing team handles the SCA cycle from initial Kaiser engagement through external appeal if needed.

Initial Kaiser engagementThe starting point is contact with the member’s Kaiser primary care or behavioral-health team to document the clinical case for non-Kaiser treatment. This includes substance-use history, prior Kaiser treatment episodes (if any), current clinical presentation, and the specific reason in-network options are inadequate (geographic, capacity, prior-treatment-relationship, family-systems, or clinical-mismatch reasons). Without this initial Kaiser engagement, the SCA pathway typically can’t open.
Continuity of Care exception (when applicable)If the member is already in active treatment at Gev’s Recovery when Kaiser coverage starts (mid-treatment job change, COBRA-to-Kaiser transition, family-plan switch), federal continuity-of-care provisions and Kaiser’s own internal exception process can keep the active treatment authorized while a transition plan develops. Our team files the Continuity of Care request immediately on intake.
SCA negotiation with Kaiser UMIf neither the member nor the existing-treatment situation supports Continuity of Care, we move to formal SCA negotiation. This is a direct negotiation between our billing team and Kaiser’s contracting and UM team to set rates, authorization length, and clinical-review requirements for a one-time out-of-network admission. SCA negotiations can take 24 hours to 2 weeks depending on Kaiser’s response time and the strength of the clinical case.
Clinical documentation and ASAM 3.5 case-buildingSCA approval requires a clinically airtight case for non-Kaiser treatment. Our medical and clinical teams document substance-use history, withdrawal-risk assessment, prior treatment episodes, co-occurring psychiatric conditions, ASAM 3.5 dimensional assessment, and the explicit reasons Kaiser’s in-network options are not clinically appropriate. Forensic-psychiatry credentials matter when documenting workplace, legal, or custody-system context.
Concurrent review during the SCA periodOnce an SCA is granted, Kaiser typically schedules concurrent reviews to evaluate continued out-of-network care versus step-down to Kaiser in-network programs. Our UR team submits documentation supporting continued non-Kaiser care when the clinical picture warrants — typically that the relapse-potential or recovery-environment dimension still requires the residential setting Kaiser cannot replicate.
External appeal — California IMR for Kaiser denialsWhen SCA negotiation fails or a denial is issued, California Independent Medical Review through DMHC is available to Kaiser members. CA IMR independent clinical reviewers evaluate whether Kaiser’s denial of out-of-network coverage was appropriate under California’s medical-necessity standard (per SB 855). The IMR reviewer’s decision is binding on Kaiser. We handle the IMR filing and the supporting clinical evidence.

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 Kaiser coverage

Kaiser Permanente operates under California’s HMO regulatory framework, which gives Kaiser members specific protections most commercial-PPO members don’t have.

Federal: the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA, 2008)Group health plans that cover mental-health and substance-use disorder benefits must apply financial requirements (deductibles, copays, out-of-pocket maximums) and treatment limitations (visit caps, prior-authorization rules) no more stringently than they apply to medical and surgical benefits. Enforced by the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor, and Treasury.
California: SB 855 (2020) — particularly important for Kaiser membersCalifornia’s SB 855 requires HMOs and other CA-regulated commercial plans to cover medically necessary treatment for all mental-health and substance-use disorders. The law uses ASAM as the medical-necessity standard for SUD. Critically, SB 855 requires plans to cover medically necessary treatment that is not available in-network — meaning if Kaiser’s in-network options are clinically inadequate for a specific member, SB 855 supports out-of-network coverage. This is the legal lever for many Kaiser SCA negotiations.
California Independent Medical Review (DMHC)Kaiser members denied SCA or out-of-network coverage can file with DMHC for IMR. Independent clinical reviewers issue binding decisions, typically within 30 days for standard reviews and 7 days for expedited urgent reviews involving substance-use treatment.

When we appeal a Kaiser SCA denial, the appeal is built on the clinical documentation, federal MHPAEA, California SB 855, and the specific medical-necessity case for non-Kaiser treatment.

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 Kaiser SCA negotiations. Kaiser’s UM team will sometimes propose 14-to-21-day SCA approvals as a default, with step-down to Kaiser in-network IOP afterwards. The clinical-necessity case for longer SCA periods has to lean on the research: the relapse-potential and recovery-environment dimensions of ASAM 3.5 often require longer residential than 21 days, and the NIDA evidence supports continued treatment past acute withdrawal stabilization.

When concurrent review tries to cut the SCA period short, our UR and medical teams document the clinical reasoning, file additional Kaiser engagement requests, and pursue California IMR when warranted.

Who has Kaiser Permanente coverage we commonly verify

Kaiser Permanente is California’s largest HMO, with significant footprints in Northern and Southern CA, plus the Mid-Atlantic region, Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon-Washington, and Georgia. Some of the populations whose plans we commonly verify:

  • Kaiser CA commercial employer-group members — Northern California (Bay Area, Sacramento, Central Valley) and Southern California (LA, OC, San Diego, Inland Empire) employer-group plans
  • Kaiser ACA Marketplace members — individual plans purchased through Covered California
  • Kaiser Senior Advantage Medicare members — Kaiser’s Medicare Advantage line; CMS rules apply on top of Kaiser’s HMO structure
  • Kaiser Medi-Cal managed-care members — Medi-Cal beneficiaries enrolled in Kaiser’s Medi-Cal line (verification is different)
  • CalPERS Kaiser members — California state employees and retirees who chose Kaiser
  • Kaiser KFHPWA, KP Mid-Atlantic, KP Colorado, KP Hawaii, KP Georgia members — out-of-region Kaiser members traveling to California
  • Spouses and dependents of all of the above on family group plans

If your card lists Kaiser Permanente, Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, or KP, our UR team can walk through the SCA verification with you.

How to verify your Kaiser benefits and start an SCA

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. Kaiser members, family members of Kaiser members, and family advocates calling on behalf of an active Kaiser member are all welcome.
2. We engage Kaiser directly to open the SCA conversationOur UR team contacts Kaiser using your member ID, identifies the appropriate Kaiser regional UM team, and opens the SCA conversation — including documentation of why in-network options are clinically inadequate. We also identify whether Continuity of Care applies to your specific situation.
3. Clinical-necessity case-building (typically within 24 hours)While Kaiser engages, our medical and clinical teams build the ASAM 3.5 case for non-Kaiser treatment. SCA approvals can take 24 hours to 2 weeks; we work the case actively during that window. Verification is free, confidential, and not a commitment to admit.

Kaiser Permanente rehab coverage — frequently asked questions

Does Kaiser cover rehab outside the Kaiser network?

Sometimes. Kaiser is a closed-system HMO; out-of-network coverage is not standard. The two pathways are Single-Case Agreement (SCA), which Kaiser negotiates case-by-case when in-network options are inadequate, and Continuity of Care exceptions for members already in active treatment with a non-Kaiser provider. Both require clinical-necessity documentation.

What is a Single-Case Agreement (SCA) and how does it work for Kaiser members?

An SCA is a one-time contract Kaiser negotiates with an out-of-network provider when in-network options are clinically inadequate. The agreement specifies authorization length, rates, and concurrent-review requirements. Our team handles the SCA negotiation directly with Kaiser’s contracting and UM teams. Approvals can take 24 hours to 2 weeks depending on the case.

What does California SB 855 mean for Kaiser members?

SB 855 is California’s mental-health and substance-use parity law (2020). It requires Kaiser and other CA-regulated plans to cover medically necessary SUD treatment using ASAM as the standard, and explicitly supports out-of-network coverage when in-network options are clinically inadequate. SB 855 is the legal lever behind many Kaiser SCA negotiations.

Does Kaiser cover medical detox at non-Kaiser facilities?

Sometimes — via SCA when Kaiser’s in-network detox capacity is unavailable, when there’s a clinical reason Kaiser’s facility isn’t appropriate, or via Continuity of Care when the member is already in active detox at a non-Kaiser facility.

What happens if Kaiser denies my SCA request?

We file with California Independent Medical Review (IMR) through the Department of Managed Health Care. Independent clinical reviewers evaluate whether Kaiser’s denial was appropriate under SB 855’s medical-necessity standard. The IMR reviewer’s decision is binding on Kaiser, typically within 30 days for standard reviews and 7 days for expedited urgent reviews.

Will my Kaiser primary care doctor’s referral matter for the SCA?

Yes. The starting point for most SCA conversations is documented engagement with the member’s Kaiser primary care or behavioral-health team. A referral or written acknowledgment from the Kaiser provider documenting why non-Kaiser treatment is clinically appropriate strengthens the SCA case considerably.

Does Kaiser cover MAT outside the Kaiser network?

Generally Kaiser prefers to prescribe MAT (buprenorphine, naltrexone, acamprosate) inside their network. Out-of-network MAT prescription via SCA is uncommon but possible when there’s a clinical reason for non-Kaiser care.

I’m a Kaiser member but currently in treatment at Gev’s Recovery — what now?

This is the strongest Continuity of Care position. Federal law and Kaiser’s own internal exception process can keep your active treatment authorized while a transition plan develops. We file the Continuity of Care request immediately on Kaiser-coverage start.

Open your Kaiser SCA conversation

Within about 30 minutes you have a written summary of what’s covered, the prior-auth requirements, and any cost-sharing. Verification is free, confidential, and not a commitment to admit.

▸ Verify your Kaiser benefitsCall (844) 501-5005

Kaiser Permanente, Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, and KP are trademarks of their respective owners. References are made for informational purposes only; we are not affiliated with or endorsed by Kaiser. Insurance acceptance is subject to benefit verification. Treatment outcomes vary by individual; statements about the SCA process, 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.