Apr 232010
 

The passage of health care reform is a step in the right direction, but the job is clearly not done.

death-panel Shortly after they were diagnosed with breast cancer, each of the women learned that her health insurance had been canceled. There was Yenny Hsu, who lived and worked in Los Angeles. And there was Patricia Reilling, a successful art gallery owner and interior designer from Louisville, Kentucky.

Neither of these women knew about the other. But besides their similar narratives, they had something else in common: Their health insurance carriers were subsidiaries of WellPoint, which has 33.7 million policyholders — more than any other health insurance company in the United States.

The women paid their premiums on time. Before they fell ill, neither had any problems with their insurance. Initially, they believed their policies had been canceled by mistake.

They had no idea that WellPoint was using a computer algorithm that automatically targeted them and every other policyholder recently diagnosed with breast cancer. The software triggered an immediate fraud investigation, as the company searched for some pretext to drop their policies, according to government regulators and investigators.

Once the women were singled out, they say, the insurer then canceled their policies based on either erroneous or flimsy information. WellPoint declined to comment on the women’s specific cases without a signed waiver from them, citing privacy laws.

That tens of thousands of Americans lost their health insurance shortly after being diagnosed with life-threatening, expensive medical conditions has been well documented by law enforcement agencies, state regulators and a congressional committee. Insurance companies have used the practice, known as "rescission," for years. And a congressional committee last year said WellPoint was one of the worst offenders.

But WellPoint also has specifically targeted women with breast cancer for aggressive investigation with the intent to cancel their policies, federal investigators told Reuters. The revelation is especially striking for a company whose CEO and president, Angela Braly, has earned plaudits for how her company improved the medical care and treatment of other policyholders with breast cancer.

The disclosures come to light after a recent investigation by Reuters showed that another health insurance company, Assurant Health, similarly targeted HIV-positive policyholders for rescission. That company was ordered by courts to pay millions of dollars in settlements.

In his push for the health care bill, President Barack Obama said the legislation would end such industry practices.

But many critics worry the new law will not lead to an end of these practices. Some state and federal regulators — as well as investigators, congressional staffers and academic experts — say the health care legislation lacks teeth, at least in terms of enforcement or regulatory powers to either stop or even substantially reduce rescission.

"People have this idea that someone is going to flip a switch and rescission and other bad insurance practices are going to end," says Peter Harbage, a former health care adviser to the Clinton administration. "Insurers will find ways to undermine the protections in the new law, just as they did with the old law. Enforcement is the key."… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Reuters>

Here’s the problem.  HCR makes rescission illegal.  However the minimum fine is $100 per patient per day.  $100 per day is so much less expensive than the cost of treating a cancer patient, that you know that Big Insurance Profit Pigs will jump in line to pay the fines.  HCR is still being interpreted from the law to the specific regulations through which the law will be implemented.  Obama can put teeth into those regulations by executive order.

But even that is only a stop gap measure.  Just one Republican in the White House puts Big Insurance in the driver’s seat again.  Under Bush, the GOP simply refused to enforce any existing laws that interfered with corporate greed.  That cannot be allowed to happen.  The solution is single payer health care., because your health is too important to leave the decisions to corporations who care nothing for healt and everything for profit.

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  8 Responses to “Wellpoint: Death Panels for Women”

  1. I saw Michael Moore comment on this on Countdown last night, and as usual, he was spot-on. His observation was true that future generations will correctly view our current practice of allowing greedy corporate middlemen to profit immensely off the sickness of others as being as barbaric a practice as we correctly view the 18th century’s applying of leeches as a form of medical treatment. Wellpoint and all the other wholly unnecessary, self-serving “health” insurance middlemen are our 21st century leeches of medicine. Our use of these leeches, just like those of the 18th century, should be permanently discarded. BRING ON SINGLE-PAYER, GOVERNMENT-RUN HEALTH CARE AND IMPRISON WELLPOINT’S BOARD OF DIRECTORS!

  2. The death panel company would be more aptly named “Hell-Point”. They have succeeded in buying enough politicains and indoctrinating the masses into fear of “socialism” to allow countless preventable deaths. The conned-servatives will not see reality until it is too late and they are dropped from coverage.

  3. I read about this yesterday – to think they had a computer program that singled out breast cancer patients is just sick. And $100/day/patient is nothing. I think a quarter’s worth of revenue for every patient rescinded is more in order.

  4. I’ve been researching and writing about these barbarians for years. Nothing, nothing they do surprises me anymore. No words can adequately describe how I feel about them. Rage doesn’t even begin to describe it.

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