Health knowledge made personal
Join this community!
› Share page: Email Digg del.icio.us Reddit icon StumbleUpon Technorati
Go
Search posts:

Mute

Posted Feb 10 2010 4:40am
At this pointI have no idea what to say. People ask me -- is health reform dead? Is something still on track? I have no clueand neither does anybody else.

The President is holding a televised bipartisan summit on February 25. The Republicans are already getting nervous since he pretty much always out-performs them in style and graceeven if you disagree with him on substance. He says he's willing to consider Republican ideas. Indeedthe Senate health insurance reform bill includes provisions that would allow insurers to sell across state lines and limit some medical malpractice suitsand the President has said he is willing to listen. But the Republicans want to scrap all the work that's been done and start over from scratch. I'm not sure America can absorb another year of this fight.

The President also hasn't ruled out using the reconciliation process in the Senate to get a bill passed by only 51 votes rather than the 60 votes needed for cloturewhich means bringing a bill to the floor of the Senate in the usual fashion. Reconciliation can be and has been used to make budgetary changesand surely health reform affects the budget. But the House wants the Senate to go first and the Senate wants the House to go firstso like school childrenthey do nothing but make angry faces and call each other silly names.

I can look at this from lots of directions. I sit here all day and talk to people who are alternatively despairing or angry or scared because they have no insurance andthusno health care. I piece together a patchwork quilt of benefits for them -- a free clinic herea free prescription drug there -- but these are band-aidsnot solutions. And so when I look at this situation from their perspectiveI feel a sense of urgency that I don't think the Congress of the United States quite gets.

I can also talk politics. Health reform died in 1994bringing with it a wave of Republican members of Congress that stalled all further progress during the Clinton administration. If it dies again nowno Democrat will ever raise it again -- and no Republican has the will to do so. So we can just forget it. Health care costs will continue to increase. Their proportion of our total spending will continue to grow. The Democrats will have been shown up as complete failuresunable to act even when they had a majority in the House and a super-majority in the Senateand the Republicans will have been shown up as the party of "no." There are no winners here -- especially not the American people.

What I can't do is figure out what perspectivewhose interestis served if health reform dies other than the health insurance industry. And so we see Anthem of California raising their rates for individual plans by 39%. 39%. That is not a typo. When Anthem of Connecticut tried to do the same thing this past yearthe Insurance Department (prodded by our wonderful Healthcare Advocate Kevin Lembo) limited the increase to 25%. As if that were acceptable. For people who are spending $1000 per month on health carea 25 or 39% increase is huge. And things will only get worse if we do nothing.

I can't figure out who else wins in all of this. Doctors aren't happy with the current state of affairs. I talked to two doctors just yesterday who were mad as hell that they can't get their patients the medication they need OR THEY WILL DIE. No joke -- we're not talking minor things here -- we're talking life and death. The pharmaceutical companies? Wellthey sure do make a lot of moneybut you have to give them some credit -- every one of them has patient assistance programs through which poor and uninsured patients can get free medications. See www.needymeds.org. So could they stand to make less profit? Of course -- a lot less. But at least they are contributing something to a temporary solutionand that's more than the insurance industry can say for itself.

The insurance companies must be having a party every day that goes by without any reform bill passed. On the backs of people who are suffering more than you can know.

I work very hard -- those of you who know me know that I work harder than my body is comfortable with. But I have never worked as hard as I'm working right now. The insurance appeals I'm handling now are just brutal -- every one of themlife and death. Every one of thema rare disease for which there is no FDA approved optionso the insurers just don't want to treat at all -- life and death. How is it that I could have three calls from three patients with neuromyelitis optica (NMO or Devic's disease) all with Blue Cross of Illinoisall denied a totally routine treatment called rituximab all within a couple of weeks of each other? There are maybe 5000 people with NMO in the US and I hear from three of them in the space of 2 weeks? It seems impossible. If it's not NMOit's gastroparesis or a brain tumoror Tourette's syndrome. The insurance companies are laughing all the way to the bank. They are collecting premiums and then denying ALL treatment to people with rare diseases because there's nothing FDA approved for these rare diseases -- so therefore they get nothing. As if there were no concept of "orphan" drugs for "orphan" diseases.

I'm just one person. I can't help all of these people. But who else is there? I'm telling you -- the other people who do insurance appeals are referring people to me!!!

The whole thing's going to crash and burn. Yeahthat includes mebut I'm not the important part. The whole system is going to crash and burn. Doing nothing simply is not an option. As costs go up 39%people will have no choice but to go without insurancewhich means their chronic illnesses spiral out of controllanding them in the emergency room -- and latelyI'm hearing more and more than emergency rooms are sending people who don't have insurance away. There is nowhere to go. There is no reason for hope. There is nothing for us.

And the President and Congress don't hear uscan't hear uswon't hear us. And so we will die. Quietly. Avoidably. Tragically. We will just die.

Doesn't that make you want to fight even just a little? Jennifer
Post a comment
Write a comment: