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Healthcare reform is about lives, not just politics

If health insurers can keep denying coverage to anyone, millions of Americans could be left to fend for themselves in a system that openly discriminates against the sick and leaves many destitute.

April 13, 2012|David Lazarus
  • “I don’t sleep at night thinking about what could happen,” says Dale Berman, who has Crohn’s disease.
“I don’t sleep at night thinking about what could happen,”… (Bob Chamberlin, Los Angeles…)

Dale Berman doesn't just have a rooting interest in the Supreme Court upholding the healthcare reform law. You could say his life depends on it.

Berman, 54, of Burbank is a freelance photographer who has hadCrohn's diseasehis entire life. Crohn's is a severe intestinal disorder that can cause intense pain and a variety of complications. Berman has had to undergo three operations and has been hospitalized on numerous occasions.

He's also watched as his insurance costs have steadily increased over the years, forcing him to seek refuge in government programs for "high-risk" patients who are unable to receive affordable coverage from private-sector insurers.

Berman is now in California's federally funded Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan, created by the healthcare reform law as a temporary refuge for people awaiting establishment of so-called insurance exchanges in 2014 and the prospect of insurers not being able to deny coverage to anyone.

That prospect, and the exchanges themselves, are now in jeopardy if the Supreme Court decides to throw out a requirement that most people buy coverage, as many now fear. If that happens, the entire reform law could crumble.

Millions of people like Berman could then find themselves at Square One, left to fend for themselves in a healthcare system that openly discriminates against the sick and leaves many destitute as the bills pile up.

"It's terrifying," he told me. "I don't sleep at night thinking about what could happen."

We probably won't know until the end of June how the court will rule on healthcare reform. But judging from the tenor of questions posed by most of the conservative justices, it seems highly possible that the insurance mandate will be declared unconstitutional and that the rest of the law will be sent back to Congress for a rewrite.

Considering it took almost 20 years for Democratic lawmakers to find the wherewithal to tackle healthcare since the last time they got burned by conservatives on this issue, it's hard to imagine much willingness to attempt a do-over, at least any time soon.

Not to be alarmist, but this could be the last stab at healthcare reform many of us will see in our lifetimes.

Berman's experiences with the healthcare system are instructional for what's at stake.

Most people with preexisting conditions have to rely on landing a job with group coverage if they want health insurance. But people with Crohn's often have difficulty with full-time jobs because of the unpredictability of their disease. They're sometimes incapacitated for days at a time.

Berman said he was able to enroll in 2003 in a plan offered by a photographers trade association. The plan initially cost $3,500 a year and came with a $2,500 deductible.

By 2008, however, the plan's annual rate had more than tripled to about $12,300, and Berman was informed that it would jump again in 2009 to roughly $18,000.

"That would have been nearly half my income at the time," he said. "I couldn't afford to pay it."

So Berman turned instead to California's Major Risk Medical Insurance Program, the state's insurer of last resort for people with chronic conditions. His annual premium ran more than $13,000 and coverage was capped at $75,000 a year.

Berman was hospitalized at UCLA in 2010 for an intestinal blockage. While he was there, a hospital staffer stopped by his bedside and informed him that his treatment would surpass his $75,000 insurance cap.

"They wanted to know how I was going to pay for everything," Berman recalled. "I was dehydrated. I was weak. I'd lost a lot of weight. But all I could do was check myself out of the hospital to save money."

It was a frightening moment. As Berman made his way home that day, the only thought in his mind was, "This is how the system is supposed to work?"

So he switched again, this time to the Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan, or PCIP, which costs only about $4,500 a year and has no limit on how much treatment will be covered annually. To be eligible for the program, Berman had to forgo health insurance for six months, but he decided the risk was worth it.

"I was lucky," he said. "I didn't need to be hospitalized during that time."

More than 9,000 Californians are in PCIP, but the plan was always intended to be a temporary stopgap. Once the insurance exchanges are up and running, people in the program would shift to policies offered by private insurers that, under the terms of the healthcare reform law, would be prohibited from turning anyone away.

But what happens if the reform law is cut down by the Supreme Court? Where would PCIP participants go?

Jeanie Esajian, a spokeswoman for the state program, declined to speculate.

"We think this discussion is very premature," she said. "We have no reason to believe we won't be transitioning people to the exchange after 2013."

The plan has already received $347 million in federal funds for the year, Esajian said. Funding for next year and beyond has yet to be allocated.

  • executivecoachphilip at 7:42 PM April 16, 2012

    Healthcare is only important if you want to live.  Tying whether someone gets access to healthcare to one's employment makes no sense.  We get police protection and fire protection regardless of our employment status; healthcare is at least as important as police and fire protection.  The story of Dale Berman could be told millions of times because health is personal.  More than forty million Americans either cannot afford health insurance or are barred from purchase by the insurance companies because they have chronic and expensive illnesses.  I cannot think of anything in America more immoral than health insurance companies making huge profits by paying for health care expenses . . . it just makes no sense to allow these companies to rake off thirty percent or more off the top and then have them toss out covered customers when they begin to have expensive claims.  Time to provide Medicare for everyone.  We all get protection in the Courts, we all get protection with the Defense department, we need for every American citizen to get health care without having to declare bankruptcy.

  • Coughl at 3:03 PM April 15, 2012

    If health care was about lives, we would have had universal coverage at a reasonable price a long time ago.

    In the U.S., the unfortunate truth is that health care is about profits and politics. 

    Sick people are considered a 'market'. 

    Health care delivery systems are designed around that concept of a 'market' to enrich companies and individuals at the expense of as many sick people as possible.

    The profits feed the politics that seek to maintain the status quo to keep the profits rolling in.  The unvirtuous cycle?

  • Bridgeport at 8:15 AM April 15, 2012

    There will be fierce lobbying against any reform of the for-profit health insurance industry. Four CEOs in the health care sector each walked away with golden parachutes in excess of $100 MILLION in addition to their regular compensation of millions a year. William W. McGuire of United Health Group got $285,996,009. ** http://origin.library.constantcontact.com/download/get/file/1102561686275-69/GTMI_GoldenParachutes_012012.pdf  ** His successor, Stephen Hemsley made $101.96 MILLION in only one year, 2010. **  http://www.forbes.com/lists/2011/12/ceo-compensation-11_land.html

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