Posts Tagged ‘Obama’

Hospital drops transplant patient from kidney waiting list because of loss of insurance

November 18, 2010

So the health insurance saga continues.  It has been almost three weeks since I haven’t had insurance.  I’ve contacted the White House, the governor, my congressman, the Maryland Attorney General’s Office, the Maryland Insurance Administration and the Joint Commission on Health Care Organizations, plus many more organizations that I don’t have time to mention.

So the hospital dropped me from the waiting list for a kidney transplant because I don’t have insurance.  It’s like an episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm only not that funny.  Whatever can go wrong will.

I even faxed a bunch of documents today and the fax said it went through and the recipient says they didn’t get it.  Same with scanned and emailed PDF documents.

As for the “Medical non-compliance” part, they claim that I should be on dialysis by now, though I can’t get on it without insurance.  It’s just a way to drop me once my insurance terminated.

One thing is clear — the Obama health care plan didn’t go far enough.  The law made it illegal for insurance companies to discriminate against people with pre-existing conditions…starting in 2014.

In Maryland, there is a new law that states that you can’t talk on the phone while driving.  What if they said, “Here’s the new law…but it doesn’t go into effect until 2014.”  At some point a law was also put in place that required people in cars to wear seat belts.  What if they said the law doesn’t go into effect for another four years?

I’ve spent the last two weeks working on this and there’s no end in sight.

It’s just typical how people will kick you when you’re down.  It’s not, “What can I do to help you get health insurance back?” it’s, “Oh, you lost your insurance?  We have to let you go.”  It’s amazing how fast they cut me loose.  It’s like an athlete having an injury, so he’s temporarily no longer any good to the team, so he gets cut.

White House sends form letter back about urgent health insurance issue

November 17, 2010

I wrote and called the White House several times with an urgent specific issue about health insurance and got a form letter back. I lost my health insurance with the only company that covers people in Maryland with pre-existing conditions, and I will need dialysis or a kidney transplant soon.  The numbers and websites below are no good for me because I’m not eligible for any of those programs. Medicaid has a $12,000 deductible in the first six months which is totally ridiculous.

By the way, a lot of people, including those at Health and Human Services (both national and local) are under the mistaken impression that the new health care law prohibits insurance companies from discriminating against people on the basis of pre-existing conditions, but that’s not true.  The provision is only good if you are under 19 or if it is after 2014. In fact, the way the underwriting codes are written, it is literally impossible for someone born with a pre-existing condition to get health insurance except through a federal pool but you have to have not had insurance for six months.  Some states like Maryland have their own plans, making people ineligible for the federal plan, and the Maryland Health Insurance Plan was the one that terminated me because I missed a payment.  They rejected my appeal. The second appeal is in progress but they say they are too busy to get to it now.

Yesterday I spent the whole day at the local HHS and at the end of the day they finally told me there would be a $12,000 deductible for Medicaid.  I wish they had told me that last week when I was there.

Imagine if you forgot to pay your phone bill once, they didn’t give you a warning or even notify you of the termination, and then your phone service was cut off with no chance of getting any other phone service (unless you paid $12,000 first).  Well, health insurance is a much more important issue.  Without it, my donor can’t get tested, I can’t get my kidney function tested, I can’t get a procedure done to get back on the waiting list, I can’t get surgery to prepare for dialysis, I can’t get medications, not to mention that there’s always the possibility of getting in an accident or getting sick.

Here’s the White House’s form letter back:

From: no-reply@correspondence.whitehouse.gov
Subject: Thank you for your message.
Date: Tue, 16 Nov 2010 18:45:04 -0500

Dear Friend:

Thank you for writing.  I have been moved and inspired by the stories of Americans struggling with health care, and I appreciate your perspective.  It is because of the many men and women facing frustration, hardship, and financial burden in addition to significant health problems that we worked so hard to get health reform done.

After a century of striving, after a year of debate, and after a historic vote, health care reform is no longer an unmet promise to the American people.  It is the law of the land.  While some reforms will be put in place later, a host of desperately needed reforms have already gone into effect.  To learn more about what health reform means for you, visit www.HealthCare.gov orwww.WhiteHouse.gov/HealthReform.

As we work together to improve the lives of all our citizens, please know the trials and triumphs of Americans like you motivate my Administration to work even harder to overcome the challenges before us.  I am confident we will emerge from these tough times stronger than before with a renewed promise of a better future for all.

For more information on resources that may be available to you, please visit http://go.usa.gov/aIv or http://go.usa.gov/aI7 or call 1-(800)-FED-INFO.  Those seeking assistance with health care can also call the Department of Health and Human Services at 1-(877)-696-6775.

Again, thank you for contacting me.  I wish you all the best.

Sincerely,

Barack Obama

 

Strasmas II: Stephen Strasburg strikes out 10 in 2nd home start but Nats lose 2-1 to White Sox in 11

June 18, 2010

Stephen Strasburg pitched another spectacular game for the Washington Nationals Friday night in his second home start but the Nats fell to the Chicago White Sox, 2-1 in 11 innings.

President Obama was in attendance to watch the White Sox take on the Nats and Strasburg in front of a sellout crowd of 40,325 at Nationals Park. Strasburg struck out 10 batters in seven innings and surrendered just one run in his third start.

Strasburg now has 32 strikeouts, which is a major league record for most strikeouts in the first three games of a career. Incredibly, the 21-year old rookie phenom had no walks for the second straight game at Nationals Park. In two starts at home Strasburg has an otherworldly 24 strikeouts and no walks. Strasburg left with a no-decision after pitching the seventh inning with the Nats (31-37) down 1-0.

To see the rest of my article on Examiner.com, click here.

Obama and the media: give Hillary some credit on health care

April 4, 2010

It’s a real shame that neither the media nor President Obama have given Hillary Clinton any credit at all for the new health care plan.  It was more than 15 years ago that she basically drafted a similar plan.  The media has always been anti-Hillary, and Obama only gave the Clintons a quick mention during the press conference a couple of weeks ago.  He also stumbled across their names.

Health Insurance Fiasco, Part Two

December 23, 2009

Below is an example of why having a health insurance plan such as the one federal employees and members of Congress have would simplify things for patients and make coverage more fair, rather than allowing people to have the quality of their health insurance based on what type of job they have or who their employer is.

A couple of months ago I called CareFirst Blue Cross/Blue Shield’s Maryland Health Insurance Plan to ask what they covered for kidney transplants.  I had previously talked to the Financial Coordinator at a hospital who said that MHIP/BCBS does cover transplants – that you don’t have to get Medicare.

First, the person on the line at MHIP/BCBS strongly emphasized that a kidney transplant would have to be pre-approved in order to be covered.  I guess there are a lot of people who get kidney transplants who don’t need them. Maybe she thought I was trying to get the benefits of a kidney transplant when it wasn’t really necessary.  She was also kind of mean, which seemed strange.  Customer service reps are supposed to be nice, or at least neutral.

Anyway, I found out that MHIP/BCBS covers 80% of the allowed charges for in-network surgeons and 60% for out of network if you haven’t fulfilled the $1000 out of pocket maximum.  That’s different than the deductible.  If you have satisfied the out of pocket maximum, it would be covered at 100% of the allowable costs for in network doctors (I still don’t trust this).  They couldn’t tell me how much was allowable, though.  I asked a hypothetical question – what if I had fulfilled part of the out of pocket maximum – say $700 – then would they apply the first $300 of the costs of the transplant to the out of pocket maximum and then cover the rest?  She refused to answer that and just said that in order for it to be covered I had to have fulfilled the out of pocket maximum.  She said if I hadn’t fulfilled the out of pocket maximum, the benefits would be covered at 80% of the allowable charges.  I again asked what if I had fulfilled most of the out of pocket maximum – would the difference be taken out of the first few hundred dollars of the transplant costs, so that the rest of it would be covered?  For example, if the transplant costs $100,000 (it costs a lot more, but let’s say $100,000 for simplicity), and I had fulfilled $900 of the $1000 out of pocket maximum, would they apply the first $100 out of the transplant cost to the out of pocket maximum, so that the $99,900 remaining cost would be covered?  She and a second person refused to answer, though they implied that it would only be covered at 80% of the allowable charges if I hadn’t fulfilled the out of pocket maximum.  However, a third person did tell me that yes, the difference would be applied to the out of pocket maximum.  I had asked to speak to a supervisor, but I’ve probably asked about 15 times in the last year and a half and only once gotten to speak to a supervisor.

If you really think about it, an out of pocket maximum is just that – the amount that one has to pay out of pocket and no more – but I wanted to make sure.  I’ve had a lot of problems with this insurance company in the past.  (Just a couple of weeks ago I called to see if they received my medical claim.  The representative said it would be 30-45 days from the time I mailed it to the time that they could tell me whether or not they received it – not whether or not they accepted it or when I’d get the money.  So if they didn’t receive it, I could only find out that they hadn’t received it four to six weeks after I sent it).

I’m not even going to bring up the prescription medications.  This is confusing enough.

Then I found out that all the information above about what is covered for the transplant was irrelevant, because MHIP/BCBS requires you to use Medicare for transplants if you’re eligible.  MHIP/BCBS never told me this.

I called Medicare and got through after several failed attempts.  When I did get through, the person didn’t know if transplant recipients had to get Medicare.

Then I called another hospital’s Financial Coordinator and asked how much better would it be if I had a job with federal insurance.  She said she didn’t know because there are so many different federal plans.  But as far as I know – there are only two federal plans – Standard and Basic.  Each one covers virtually 100% of everything with just copays, and the process is transparent to the patient, without a lot of confusion and applying to different plans.  But she said she wasn’t familiar with them.  That was hard to believe because these hospitals do hundreds of transplants a year and I’m sure some of the patients are federal employees.

Then I called the social worker at the same hospital.  She said that the Financial Coordinator at the previous hospital was wrong that MHIP/BCBS covers kidney transplants, because MHIP/BCBS requires patients who are eligible for Medicare to take Medicare.  Medicare is automatically offered to anyone who gets a kidney transplant.

Medicare Parts A, B, and D seem to cover 80% of everything while a Medigap policy would cover most of the remaining costs.  I estimate that the total costs would be about $600 a month, about four times as much as the costs that it would be under federal insurance.  But it’s not the money that is the biggest issue – it’s more applying for different plans and dealing with people on the phone that could be stressful either right before or right after a transplant.

Medicare only lasts three years for transplant patients.  After that they consider that you are fine even though you need to take immuno-suppressant drugs for the rest of your life.

Luckily, I live in Maryland, which through MHIP/BCBS offers health insurance to people with pre-existing conditions.  But not all states have programs like this.

I believe the reasons that many people aren’t for the health care reform bill in Congress include the fact that even though tens of millions of people don’t have health care, a majority of people do have health care.  Also, while many people are discriminated against on the basis of pre-existing conditions, most people do not have pre-existing conditions.  Should people who have insurance care about those who don’t?  Should people without pre-exising conditions care about those who have them?  I believe so, but not everybody does.   In addition, the insurance companies are big businesses, so the people who work for them and invest in them want to see them continue to make big profits.  Finally, people don’t like change – they would almost rather be in a worse situation than a better one because their fear of change is so great.

In retrospect, maybe Obama and other Democrats should have had a more clear message, and listed about three major points, and used those points over and over in speeches, because the American people like slogans and soundbytes.  For example, they should have emphasized the following simple points (we need simple – let’s be honest, our attention spans aren’t that long):

1.  Many people don’t have health care.

2.  Insurance companies discriminate on the basis of health.

3.  If the money from the profits the insurance companies make were instead used for medical care and research, people would be healthier.

They should have also used real world examples of people affected.

Health Care Reform: Obama, Autism, Mental Illness, and Kidney Disease

July 22, 2009

I thought President Obama made a good speech tonight on the case for national health care reform, stating that insurance companies have too much say over who and what is covered, nearly 50 million people don’t have health insurance, 14,000 people lose their health insurance each day, and insurance premiums have doubled in the last 10 years.  Everyone should be covered, he said, and people shouldn’t be disqualified for certain conditions.  Of course, Hillary Clinton tried to reform health care – 16 years ago when Obama was 30 years old.  Something tells me this time around it will be better accepted. I hope it gets passed, but I’m not holding my breath. Anyway, there are a lot of areas that are in need of health care reform.

Autism Speaks (www.autismspeaks.org) has launched a TV ad campaign to try to combat the health care discrimination against people with autism that currently exists.  Autism Speaks aims to ensure that autism is covered in any new national health care plan.  Currently, most states do not require health insurers to cover certain medically necessary autism therapies.  Therefore, parents of children with autism have a choice to spend money out of pocket for autism therapy, or go without.  Many don’t have the choice because they can’t afford it anyway.  Personally, I always feel a little bit guilty because the work that I do (www.coachmike.net) for kids with autism ends up being mainly for those whose parents are fairly affluent because they can afford it.

In addition to autism, mental illness should also be covered by any national health care plan.  Currently, insurance companies can discriminate against people with mental illness by calling it a pre-existing condition.  According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, “As many as 700,000 Americans are homeless on any given night. An estimated 20 to 25 percent of these people have a serious mental illness.”  How can we afford to cover autism and mental illness?  How can we afford not to?  The savings in the long run will more than pay off the costs in the short run.

I have a stake in health insurance myself, as my kidney disease (see www.mikeneedsakidney.com) will eventually require a transplant from a donor.  My current insurance will cover most of it, but “most” isn’t ideal since the cost of the surgery and the medications in the first two years could approach $200,000.  Think of dealing with an insurance company on the phone, then think of doing it either just before or after you’ve had a transplant.  Also, coverage ends after three years for transplant recipients even though immunosuppressant drugs are needed for a lifetime.  Needless to say, people who have the same health insurance as Congress would have everything 100% covered.The moral of the story?  Don’t get sick.

Also, see “Fun with Health Insurance” on my blog – go to the links on the right side, click, “Kidney Disease,” and scroll down to the second item.  I cut and pasted a bunch of posts I read on a kidney disease site.

On another personal note, I can say anecdotally that there is still a lot of resistance to national health care.  On match.com, I’ll sometimes communicate with women who list that they are “middle of the road” politically.  I always say that there are a couple of issues that I feel strongly about.  The first issue is the environment.  I’m for a clean one.  I believe that a lot of diseases, disorders, and deaths occur because of pollution in the environment.  The second issue is health care.  I say that I believe that everyone should have a fair chance at affordable health care regardless of whether they are rich or poor, healthy or sick.  I don’t say much more or less than that.  A bunch of times I’ve gotten a response from women, even in relatively liberal Maryland, Washington DC, and Northern Virginia similar to this one:  “Wow.  Maybe we shouldn’t meet.”*** – see below

You wouldn’t say that only certain people should get schooling paid for, or that only specific areas should get libraries, or that roads and bridges should be built and maintained in some areas but not others.  But somehow, it’s ok to say that some people should get health insurance and others shouldn’t, or that some people should get their health insurance terminated for pre-existing conditions.

*** Update, 7/25:  This is an actual email exchange from today, word for word, nothing left out.  When I saw her response I thought I must have provoked it but here is exactly what I wrote, followed by exactly what she wrote.  If anything, my initial email was pretty boring and a little uninspired, but certainly not inflammatory in any way.  So maybe health care reform doesn’t have much of a chance.

What I wrote:

“Hi. I liked your pics and profile. I like MD too. Would you like to meet sometime? There’s one thing. With the health care stuff you do and the middle of the road politics, what do you think about everyone deserving a fair chance at good health care? If you agree with that then you agree with me. anyway, let meknow what you think.

mike”

What she wrote back:

“Definitely probably not a good match then. I do not feel like paying for peoples’ health insurance who are too lazy to work and usurping the welfare system. Living in Baltimore, I already see this and it will only get worse. Also, I have seen first hand in other countries who have universal health care… the length of time it takes to get a doctors appointment and hopefully get the doctor you want. I can lead to unsatisfactory health care. Obama said it will not come off of the backs of the middle class but I do not believe that for a second. You want to pay for everyone elses healthcare? Go for it! I guess some of my views are more Conservative, this is one that I do not want to ruin my happy little employed life. I do feel sorry for those who have lost their jobs and I do think that there could be a package of some sort to help those folks, but other than that, I do not feel like paying for worthless slackers and people who do not choose to make their lives better. I certainly do not want to start a political debate with you, so please let’s not go there, but I have strong views on this and I do not want to get screwed anymore than I already have been. I already pay a huge amount of taxes and they do not seem to care that I am a single women and just barely scraping by. I am sure you will send a wonderful email back, so instead of having to bare hearing I am just going to block you. Good luck in your search and there are plenty of women, perhaps lower class that will agree with you… or you may just want to stick to DC because Baltimore women (at least the ones I have talked to) are on the Conservative side of this topic. I wish you all the luck in your search!”

Maybe it was a Freudian slip when she said, “I can lead to unsatisfactory health care.”

On the bright side, she does seem a little fiery.  :)

MSNBC

December 4, 2008

The political commentary shows on MSNBC, such as Countdown, have really gone off the deep end.  They were unbelievably biased in favor of Barack Obama over Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primaries, and have been even more biased in favor of Obama over John McCain.  Let me preface this by saying two things.  1)  That I understand that Fox News is so one-sided that it has been a caricature for many years.  What Fox and the Rush Limbaughs of the world did with their anti-Hillary rhetoric for no good reason for the last 15 years lasted long enough to impact her chances in this election.  And 2), I’m about as Democratic as you can get.  Why?

 

·         I believe very strongly that poor and sick people should have the same opportunity at health insurance that wealthy and healthy people do.  People shouldn’t die fighting insurance companies to cover their bills.

 

·        I believe that we should not only try to minimize the damage from climate change, but that we should have a clean environment.  Large corporations shouldn’t be allowed to pollute our air, water, and soil, causing the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the food we eat to be contaminated.  I believe we need more regulation on businesses to ensure that the environment is safe, and we also need regulation to make sure that products don’t have dangerous chemicals.  All of these problems are leading to birth defects and disease.

 

·        And I believe that we need gun control so that automatic weapons, etc. aren’t easily available by anyone.

 

So I’m definitely pro-Democrat on most issues. 

 

Back to MSNBC.  Keith Olbermann, Chris Matthews, and Rachel Maddow have become even more to the left than Fox News is to the right.  Strangely, they really jumped on the anti-Hillary bandwagon.  It was odd, because Hillary and Obama had basically the same policies.  They made Hillary out to be a villain, exaggerating each misstep during the primary campaign, delighting in and ignoring any of Obama’s flaws, being completely unwilling to criticize him at all.  But it’s more than the anti-Hillary bias that seems odd.  MSNBC was so vehemently against the Republicans that it became ponderous to watch.

 

Olbermann has been the worst culprit.  I never would have thought that Olbermann, a former ESPN Sportscenter anchor, would be hosting his own national show on politics.  The self-important Olbermann has such a bizarre style, yelling into the camera and constantly slamming his opponents.  He is so over the top.  There’s nothing worse than people who think they are much funnier than they are.  I never thought I would defend George W. Bush, John McCain, and Sarah Palin, but Olbermann’s commentaries against them have become personal and nasty.  Olbermann also had a couple of nasty special comments for Hillary Clinton, blowing campaign miscues way out of proportion. 

 

One other thing – you have to wonder about someone who constantly yells and screams while on TV.  It’s not professional.  I’ve had the same criticism of Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon on ESPN.  In sports it’s more understandable, but even then, stop yelling all the time. 

 

I believe in telling it like it is, but Keith has gone way off the deep end.  Olbermann is now wearing those wire rim glasses which fit him perfectly because he is so pretentious.

 

Matthews may be just as bad – because though his bias isn’t as blatant as Olbermann’s, his show is ostensibly more objective, as he interviews people from both the left and the right.  However, he was clearly anti-Hillary, and his rhetoric was almost all pro-Obama against McCain.  His stream of consciousness statements have become increasingly wacky.  He interrupts answers of his interviewees constantly with non-sequiturs.  Some of the panelists are amused by his humor; others clearly are laughing at him.  His increasing bias has left him on the sidelines rather than in the game.  He used to be a heavyweight; now he’s a lightweight. 

 

Finally, if Rachel Maddow is so deserving of her own show, why would so many commentators have had to congratulate her so much for the first two months of her show? 

 

CNN is probably a little more boring, but at least they are more objective. 

 

Part of the problem is that politics has become too partisan.  The shows are simply a moderator interviewing one person from the left and one from the right – each one equally biased.  And these are the objective shows.  Fox and MSNBC are heavily slanted in one direction.  This us vs. them mentality isn’t anything new, but people can take news shows more seriously if they at least pretend to be objective.  Whereas most people understand that Fox News is a joke, I think that most reasonable people are now understanding that MSNBC is too. 

 

Keith:  you’re a buffoon.  Keith Olbermann – tonight’s WORST PERSON…IN THE WORLD!”

 

Maybe I should just watch PBS.

 

P.S.  If there was any doubt that MSNBC was not a channel devoted to news, on Friday, November 28, just two days after the terrorist attacks in Mumbai, India, MSNBC showed a highlight show of the most wild videos caught on tape, or something like that, while the attacks were still going on. 


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