Archive for July, 2009

Basic Health Care for Everyone… (Yes, including seniors…)

As I stated earlier, we live in the most prosperous country on Earth. Yet 13% of our fellow citizens hold no insurance coverage of any kind (including 10,000,000 children), and another 7% are underinsured. What this means, fundamentally, is that 72,000,000 of your friends, relatives, neighbors, perhaps even you, lack the ability to access basic preventive and emergency health services when needed.

Why?

Some can’t afford it. Some choose to not buy it. Some feel they’re invincible. Some believe that they’ll be taken care of just fine if something happens. And then there are people like Robin Beaton from Texas, who had health insurance from Blue Cross Blue Shield, yet, when she needed a double mastectomy, her policy was rescinded. It was rescinded because she had left out a “material fact” from her application. Namely that she had acne as a young adult, and had sought treatment from a dermatologist.

The process of rescission, put simply, is defined as the setting aside of a contract. It’s a legal maneuver used by insurance companies to cancel the policies of individuals who have “left out material information” from their insurance applications. The spirit of the law of states allowing the practice of rescission (it is allowed in 50 of 50 states of the union) is to allow insurance companies to protect themselves against being defrauded by people (like me) who have expensive conditions, yet fail to disclose this on their applications for insurance. Having worked in the industry, and being trustworthy, I don’t believe in hiding this

In practice, this process is used much more routinely to take policies out of force, for example as in the aforementioned case of Ms. Beaton. Double mastectomies are not cheap. In cases such as Ms. Beaton’s, files get “red-flagged,” for review of any preexisting condition that might allow the insurance company to merely tell the policyholder that their policy was never in force because of the lack of disclosure, so that the insurance company does not have to pay. Insurance companies will rescind the policy with the hope that the person whose claim is being denied doesn’t come back and appeal the denial – or worse, get their congressperson involved.

I know this both because of the Congressional record… and because I used to work for an insurance company and routinely typed letters rescinding policies and returning policy fees because policyholders “failed to disclose prior medical conditions”. It made me ill to have to type these letters denying claims for $5,000 or so dollars for life insurance because of the lack of some disclosure. Sometimes it was obvious that the client was at fault. Sometimes the company’s claim was dubious.

But I write this asking a simple question… in a case like this, who would you rather be dealing with? An insurance company whose primary responsibility is to the shareholders of the company to ensure the largest possible profit? Or would you rather trust the decision to a government bureaucrat?

I understand that government doesn’t generally fix things… but I’d rather someone who’s disinterested being in charge of approving my claim, and not someone looking out for their bottom line.

Contact your Representative and Senator and demand this reform. We need this if we’re ever to get on an equal footing with other industrialized nations.

The race to replace Mel Martinez heats up…

Steve Schale, former (and quite successful I might add) head of the Florida for Obama campaign committee will endorse Kendrick Meek as Democratic candidate for US Senate in the upcoming 2010 race to replace retiring senator Mel Martinez. Schale will announce this in a press conference today.

This is great news, since most of the mainstream media buzz surrounding the race appears to focus solely on the single-term republican governor Charlie Crist versus Marco Rubio race as though those two are the only ones running.

With the race for healthcare reform stuck in the doldrums, and Bill Nelson on the fence about a public-run option, we need to help elect a candidate who embraces the liberal progressive agenda.

I think the race just got kicked up a notch with this hugely important endorsement.

Teabagging… again…

The teabaggers were out at the corner of Le Jeune Road and Coral Way in Coral Gables tonight, protesting “Obama’s Health Plan,” decrying universal health care as being “too expensive”.

I’m not quite sure what “too expensive” is. Of course, on that note, I’m not quite sure what “universal health care” is.

In some fashion, we already provide universal health care in the United States. If you’re dying and walk into Jackson Memorial Hospital, or Celebration Hospital (for that matter) in Celebration, Florida, the hospital is duty-bound and morally obligated to do its level best to deliver their best care to keep you alive.

Who gets to pay for that care? If you can’t, we all do in some way. Either the hospital’s charity picks up the tab, or they get a write-off on their taxes because you can’t pay it.

I don’t sit here contending that we should be paying for everyone’s non-reconstructive cosmetic surgery, Lasik procedures, or peoples’ Sildenafil citrate (google it if you need to…) But as a country, just based on principle, we should be willing to ensure that everyone has the same crack at a liver that Steve Jobs had a month ago, and that crack at that liver shouldn’t be based on one’s net worth.

If we can throw billions after billions at AIG, Bank of America, and their ilk, we can’t afford not to embrace this.