The Commercial Appeal

Wheelchair users can face hefty costs

Some are part of class-action suit suing over insurance shortfalls

- Emily Alpert Reyes

LOS ANGELES – Beth Smith dreads the day when her wheelchair finally gives out.

The aging chair has functioned as an extension of her body for roughly a decade, ferrying the 62-year-old to the transit station near her Albany, California, home; to the office where she works; and to medical appointmen­ts and other errands. When things break, she and her partner have tried to make cheap fixes with duct tape and screws.

But when it stops working for good, Smith will have to turn to her health insurance. And her insurance plan caps its coverage for wheelchair­s and other “durable medical equipment” at $2,000 a year, she said – far less than the $17,000 cost of her motorized chair.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do,” said Smith, who has cerebral palsy.

For now, she’s going to court. Smith and other wheelchair users are suing over such insurance shortfalls, arguing that failing to effectively cover wheelchair­s is discrimina­tory against disabled people.

The federal class-action suit targets the biggest commercial health insurer in California – Kaiser Foundation Health Plan – and a state agency that sets out minimum requiremen­ts for what many health plans must cover. If Smith wins in court, it could affect not only Kaiser members but also other wheelchair users with private insurance across the state.

The California case spotlights the financial burdens facing many wheelchair users in a market where the right equipment can cost thousands of dollars, or even tens of thousands of dollars, and private insurance covers only so much.

The lawsuit says a manual wheelchair meant for everyday use typically

costs between $3,000 and $5,000, while a power wheelchair can range as high as $50,000 depending on the specific customizat­ions and technology needed for the user.

Disabled people and their families have held online fundraiser­s on Gofundme, hunted for used chairs on Craigslist and through friends, and tried to “Macgyver” faltering wheelchair­s with spare parts and homemade fixes, advocates said. In years past, disability rights groups have tried to tackle the issue in the California Legislatur­e and been thwarted over cost concerns.

“Historical­ly, durable medical equipment” – such as wheelchair­s – “has always been a weak point in coverage,” said Anne Cohen, a Bay Area disability and health policy consultant. Cohen sits on the board of the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund, which is representi­ng Smith and other plaintiffs in the case along with the firm Rosen Bien Galvan & Grunfeld.

“The challenge is that over the years, wheelchair­s have gotten more and more expensive, and we’re seeing more and more skinny plans,” Cohen said. She chalked up the rise in wheelchair costs in part to many medical equipment suppliers going out of business because they couldn’t meet requiremen­ts introduced over the last decade for bidding for Medicare contracts.

Cohen said health insurers in turn have sought to curb abuse after a rash of billing scams involving medical equipment in recent decades.

Even when wheelchair­s are covered by insurers, they “each have their own really complicate­d medical management definition of when different types of wheelchair­s are medically necessary,” said Dania Palanker, assistant research professor at the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University.

For instance, an insurance company might decide that a patient does not need an electric wheelchair – which is more costly – because they have enough strength in their upper body to wheel around a manual chair, even if that causes other issues, Palanker said.

Some plans will cover a wheelchair only if it is needed at home, which Palanker called “problemati­c” because some people “can maneuver through their home, but for any outings, it would be way too much for them to try to function without a wheelchair – say going to work or going grocery shopping.”

Palanker said the private insurance market “wasn’t designed to meet the needs of disabled people, because disabled

“The challenge is that over the years, wheelchair­s have gotten more and more expensive, and we’re seeing more and more skinny plans.”

Anne Cohen

Disability and Health Policy Consultant

people were not allowed” for many years. She said that before the passage of the Affordable Care Act, which barred health insurers from denying coverage for preexistin­g conditions, many disabled people would have found it difficult to get private coverage at all.

Christina Mills, executive director of the California Foundation for Independen­t Living Centers, said she would have had an easier time getting needed equipment if she were on Medi-cal, California’s Medicaid system, than she has had on her Kaiser plan. Medi-cal doesn’t set an annual dollar cap for wheelchair­s that are deemed medically necessary and will cover wheelchair­s used outside the home, according to the California Department of Health Care Services.

Mills, whose organizati­on is among the plaintiffs now suing Kaiser, has brittle bone disease and said she spent thousands of dollars to purchase a wheelchair that fits her body properly.

“My wheelchair is my legs,” she said. “Could you imagine determinin­g whether or not you were going to get out of bed based on whether … your legs were going to be paid for?”

The California Department of Managed Health Care, the state agency being sued in the case, declined to

comment on pending litigation. Kaiser did not respond to specific questions about its health plans but said in a statement that it was “proud to offer a variety of coverage options to meet the individual needs of those who choose Kaiser Permanente.”

“All of Kaiser Permanente’s health care plan options, including those challenged in the lawsuit, provide coverage as required by law,” it stated.

The lawsuit, filed in October in federal court, alleges that Kaiser and the Department of Managed Health Care have discrimina­ted against people with disabiliti­es by failing to cover wheelchair­s as an “essential health benefit.” Under the Affordable Care Act, individual and small group health plans must cover such essential benefits without annual or lifetime caps. States each choose a particular plan as a “benchmark” for the coverage those plans must provide.

California lawmakers picked a Kaiser plan that does not cover wheelchair­s as a covered essential health benefit, according to the suit. State regulation­s detailing the requiremen­ts, in turn, include only “a narrow list of durable medical equipment” that must be covered and omit wheelchair­s without explanatio­n, the lawsuit says.

Some Kaiser plans set a $2,000 limitation on annual coverage – far below the typical cost of a power wheelchair – and cover only wheelchair­s meant to be used inside the home, the lawsuit says. Other Kaiser plans do not cover wheelchair­s at all, the suit says.

“This is really impacting thousands of people with disabiliti­es – at a minimum,” said Carly A. Myers, staff attorney with the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund. Kaiser itself is a major insurer, and “because the state of California has selected the Kaiser plan as their benchmark, it permits that discrimina­tory policy to be replicated in other plans.”

Kaiser said in its statement that California lawmakers’ choosing one of its plans as the state benchmark “confirms that Kaiser Permanente health plans do an exemplary job of providing the essential health benefits required by the Affordable Care Act to protect the health of California citizens.”

Wheelchair users and suppliers say annual caps on durable medical equipment – which includes a range of equipment such as walkers and hospital beds – are familiar features in insurance plans.

For many people who are not disabled and don’t have chronic conditions, their needs for durable medical equipment “are probably pretty limited,” said Bob Achermann, executive director of the California Associatio­n of Medical Product Suppliers. “If you break your ankle and need crutches, having a $2,000 cap probably is fine with you. But if it’s something more serious than that, it really gets expensive.”

Disability rights groups have raised the issue in Sacramento before: Thirteen years ago, a bill requiring health insurers to offer coverage for wheelchair­s and other durable medical equipment to group purchasers won approval from California lawmakers over the objections of the California Associatio­n of Health Plans, which argued it would increase costs and create administra­tive burdens for plans forced to redesign their coverage.

The associatio­n also argued, in general, new mandates would lead to higher premiums.

The bill, SB 1198, was vetoed by then-gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger over cost concerns, citing anticipate­d increases in premiums for private employers. The California Health Benefits Review

Program, in its analysis of the bill, said it expected that premiums would rise but that those increases would be “largely offset by reductions in out-ofpocket expenditur­es.”

It found that if the legislatio­n passed, total spending would go up 0.05% for people enrolled in group health plans and policies regulated by the state – an amount roughly equal to $43 million a year. A 2010 analysis of a similar bill – one that would have also addressed individual market plans and policies – found it would have raised total spending by 0.18%, or roughly $136 million a year.

Those analyses were before the implementa­tion of the Affordable Care Act. The California Associatio­n of Health Plans said in a statement that under the federal law, health plans provide coverage under the benchmark plan chosen by California.

“Any increase above and beyond the benchmark plan will increase premiums,” the associatio­n said in a statement, declining to comment further on the litigation.

Russell Rawlings, another plaintiff in the case, said his wheelchair and an added tilt option to prevent pressure sores cost roughly $10,000 – well above the $2,000 annual limit in the Kaiser plan he obtained through his employer, according to the lawsuit.

The 44-year-old has put more than 8,700 miles on his eight-yearold wheelchair, which sometimes suffers from power issues and just stops in the middle of needed trips in Sacramento.

Rawlings said he has been fortunate to have access to Medi-cal and Medicare through a state program that allows him to be employed and maintain Medi-cal eligibilit­y. But he said that when he initially went to a wheelchair supplier to replace his chair, the company saw he had Kaiser insurance and told him it couldn’t replace his existing chair. He has since been back in touch with the company and is in the process of trying to replace it through Medical.

“Just yesterday when I was returning from the grocery store, the chair shut down on me,” said Rawlings, who has cerebral palsy and works as statewide community organizer for the California Foundation for Independen­t Living Centers. He was on the sidewalk near an intersecti­on when the wheelchair stopped working. “Thank goodness I was in an environmen­t where that was OK.”

Whenever it happens, he said, “there’s that agonizing moment of, ‘Is this going to be the last time? Will it not power back on?’ ”

 ?? JASON ARMOND/LOS ANGELES TIMES VIA TNS ?? Russell Rawlings said his wheelchair and an added tilt option to prevent pressure sores cost roughly $10,000 – well above the $2,000 annual limit in the Kaiser plan he obtained through his employer, according to the lawsuit he is a plaintiff in.
JASON ARMOND/LOS ANGELES TIMES VIA TNS Russell Rawlings said his wheelchair and an added tilt option to prevent pressure sores cost roughly $10,000 – well above the $2,000 annual limit in the Kaiser plan he obtained through his employer, according to the lawsuit he is a plaintiff in.
 ?? JASON ARMOND/LOS ANGELES TIMES VIA TNS ?? Russell Rawlings has put more than 8,700 miles on his eight-year-old wheelchair, which sometimes suffers from power issues and just stops in the middle of needed trips in Sacramento.
JASON ARMOND/LOS ANGELES TIMES VIA TNS Russell Rawlings has put more than 8,700 miles on his eight-year-old wheelchair, which sometimes suffers from power issues and just stops in the middle of needed trips in Sacramento.

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