Chattanooga Times Free Press

Why insurance denies your claim

But pays your neighbor’s

- BY TOM MURPHY

Tracey Stahl lost part of a leg to bone cancer last fall, and she has to wince through bouts of crippling pain from an ill-fitting artificial limb because of a strange health insurance limit: Her plan covers just one limb per lifetime.

She now has to weigh whether to dump the nearly $9,000 cost of a new leg on her credit card as she fights her insurance company over the restrictio­n. “I feel — it’s embarrassi­ng to say — paralyzed about what to do,” said Stahl, from her home in Penfield, N.Y.

Caiti Riley’s left leg was amputated below the knee at age 4 because of a rare birth defect. The San Antonio resident is 31 now and covered by the best insurance she’s ever had. Her plan is paying most of the roughly $5,000 bill for a new running leg to complement the one she uses every day.

“I work out every day. There’s nothing really that I can’t do now,” she said.

Glaring difference­s in insurance coverage persist for amputees, children with autism and others in need of certain expensive treatments even after the Affordable Care Act set new standards as part of its push to expand and improve coverage, and despite efforts by states to mandate coverage for some treatments.

These difference­s don’t develop simply because some people pay more for better coverage. Instead, they stem from random factors like what state someone lives in or who happens to provide their coverage — and often people can do nothing about it. The federal health care law largely leaves decisions on what actually gets covered up to states or employers who provide insurance for their workers.

These gaps can bury patients in debt or force them to skip care. And they may become more common as health care costs continue to rise and insurers and employers look for ways to control that expense.

Researcher Sabrina Corlette thinks nothing short of federal action can close these coverage gaps, and she doesn’t see that happening anytime soon.

“I think you would need to see Congress say, ‘Ok, we need more uniformity here,’” said Corlette, a Georgetown Health Policy Institute professor. “And I just don’t see this Congress or any nearterm Congress stepping in and wanting to do that.”

States have passed about 1,800 mandates requiring the coverage of various treatments or conditions, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. But those mandates don’t extend beyond state borders, and they don’t apply to the self-funded coverage offered by nearly all large employers.

North Carolina, for example, recently became one of 44 states to require coverage of autism treatments — and it won’t help Iris Castillo one bit.

The Raleigh, N.C., resident said it felt like a cold bucket of water had been tossed on her when she learned that insurance from her new job won’t cover applied behavior analysis therapy for her 9-year-old son, Alex.

Hours of this daily therapy, which is a standard treatment for autistic children, have helped Alex learn simple tasks like how to brush his teeth or say hi to another kid. Castillo worries that her son will regress if treatment stops. But it can cost more than $40,000 a year, far beyond what Castillo’s family can afford.

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