Dear Mr. President:
I am writing you today because I am outraged at the notion of
involving government in healthcare decisions like they do in other
countries. I believe healthcare decisions should be between myself and
my doctor.
Well, that is not strictly true. I believe healthcare decisions
should be between myself, my doctor, and my insurance company, which
provides me a list of which doctors I can see, which specialists I can
see, and has a strict policy outlining when I can and can't see those
specialists, for what symptoms, and what tests my doctors can or cannot
perform for a given set of symptoms. That seems fair, because the
insurance company needs to make a profit; they're not in the business
of just keeping people alive for free.
Oh, and also my employer. My employer decides what health
insurance company and plans will be available to me in the first place.
If I quit that job and find another, my heath insurance will be
different, and I may or may not be able to see the same doctor as I had
been seeing before, or receive the same treatments, or obtain the same
medicines. So I believe my healthcare decisions should be between
myself, the company I work for, my insurance company, and my doctor.
Assuming I'm employed, which is a tough go in the current economy.
Hmm, but that's still a little simplistic. I suppose we should clarify.
I also believe my healthcare should depend on the form I fill out
when I apply for that health insurance, which stipulates that any
medical problems I ever had previously in my life won't be covered by
that insurance, and so I am not allowed to seek further care for them,
at least not at my insurance company's expense. That seems fair;
otherwise my insurance company might be cheated by me knowing I needed
healthcare for something in advance.
And if I didn't know about an existing condition I had, but I could have known about it, had someone discovered it, I suppose it doesn't make much sense for my insurance to cover that either.
But let us assume that all hurdles have been cleared and I am allowed to see my doctor, chosen from a list of available doctors, about a health problem, except health problems I have previously been treated for. After that, I believe my healthcare decisions should be between myself, my insurance company, my insurance plan, my employer, and my doctor.
Oh -- and the doctors at the insurance company, of course.
They will never actually meet me, or even speak to me on the
phone, and in fact I couldn't tell you the name of a single one of
them, or what state they were in, or whether or not they've just all
been outsourced to a computer program somewhere in Asia at this point
-- but they're in charge of determining which treatments might be
"effective" for me, and which will be a waste of money, er, time. They
do this by looking not at my case, which is individualistic and
piffling and minor, but at the statistical panoply of treatments on the
insurance company spreadsheet and their statistical cost vs.
effectiveness. My doctor may think one treatment or another might be
effective for me in a particular instance -- but he may be a little too
closely involved with my personal case, and unable to make these
decisions nearly as well as my less involved, more dispassionate
insurance company can.
And then there's the claims office. When my doctor sends a bill to
my insurance company, it must travel through a phalanx of people and
departments and procedures in order to determine whether or not it is,
in fact, a valid medical complaint to be treated for, done the right
way, at the right time, by a doctor on the right list. If the paperwork
is not done on time, or not done completely, or not done to the
satisfaction of the right people, or if I did not receive the proper
prior approval for the medical treatment administered, or if that
approval expired, or if the insurance company rescinded the approval
months after the fact, my medical care will not be covered. While my
doctor has had to sometimes forgo payments because the 30-day window
for receiving "all requested documentation" somehow slipped by, I
myself have received notes from the insurance company denying coverage
for treatments from twelve full months beforehand. It can't be helped:
sometimes it takes twelve months for their computers to process the
paperwork and determine that I owe them more money. They like to be
thorough.
So that's getting a bit more complete. I believe my healthcare
decisions should be between me, my insurance company plan, my statement
of preexisting conditions, the claims adjusters at my insurance
company, my insurance company's doctors, my employer, and myself.
And the separate claims review team that will be looking over my treatment.
My health insurer might have flagged me as someone who needs a lot
of healthcare, and who is therefore costing the company money. Needing
to use the insurance you paid for is naturally a suspicious activity:
that means that a special review team will look over my paperwork,
seeing if there is any vaguely plausible reason for the company to be
rid of me. They will look for loopholes in my application,
irregularities in the paperwork my doctor filled out or any other
situations which, like magic, mean that all the money I have paid for
health insurance premiums was in fact irrelevant, null and void, and
they don't have to pay a single cent of claims because I defrauded them
by neglecting to remember that I had chicken pox in sixth grade, not
fifth, or that what I presumed was a bad cold in 1997 was in fact
maybe-possibly-bronchitis, and I can't possibly expect to be covered
for any lung-related complaints since then. I suppose I cannot complain
too much; after all, this is a crack squadron of employees whose pay is
determined by how much they can reduce the healthcare costs incurred by
the company. It would be irresponsible for them to not look for such loopholes.
And then there is the board of directors at the insurance company,
of course. My personal healthcare is irrelevant, when considered in the
abstract; a health insurance company exists to make a profit, and the
pay of every executive in the company and every board member is
dependent on squeezing out the maximal amount of profits from every
dollar.
This is where "experimental" and/or "preventative" treatments come
in. New-fangled treatments, things that have only been around for a
decade or two, are usually the most expensive. For example, when I
complained of chest pains I could have had an CT scan to determine the
state of the arteries around my heart, and it would have shown exactly
where the problems, if any, lie. This is what the specialist
recommended -- but using a CT scan in this way is considered
"preventative" treatment, not "diagnostic" treatment, so it is not
covered, and I am not allowed to have one. Instead, less accurate tests
were used to get a "feel" for what the arteries might look like; these
tests are covered. Problem solved; as it turned out, my chest
pains were probably a preexisting condition, most likely caused by me
having bones. And if it's not, I suppose we'll find out in another ten
years or so, when no doubt I am covered by another insurance company
and not this one.
These may seem like arbitrary determinations, but they are not.
They are based on a rigorous study of how well the treatment works, how
much it costs, and how likely it is that the company will have its
corporate ass sued off if they do not provide it. This is weighed
against the desired profit announcements for the insurance company
during that quarter in order to determine how much care must be denied
to customers, in aggregate, in order to meet the appropriate financial
goals.
Let us not forget the obligations to the stockholders, after all.
Of every dollar paid in premiums, currently eighty cents it paid back
out for actual medical claims; the rest is administration and
profit-taking. Fifteen years ago the number was 95 cents: in other
words, the insurance companies themselves have gone from taking five
cents of every healthcare dollar to taking twenty cents of every
dollar, all since the Clinton presidency.
The stockholders require healthy profits. The executives require
personal profits for providing those profits. And since people for some
reason aren't getting any healthier, those profits can only come from
one place -- reducing what the company pays out when people do become sick.
I recently heard a radio interview with a health insurance company whistleblower; he was describing his trips on the company jet. Gourmet meals were served on china, and the forks were gold plated.
I was pondering this, while looking over the letter from my
insurance company informing me that they were switching the coverage of
my most expensive monthly medication -- those expensive allergy/asthma
shots now count as a "procedure", not as "medicine", and so therefore
those vials are not covered by my pharmaceutical plan anymore. It must
be very difficult to balance all the tasks of an insurance company CEO.
If the corporate jet has inferior place settings, imagine the corporate
shame. If a new medication or treatment is no longer considered
"experimental", or a treatment classified as actually useful, as
opposed to "preventative" nonsense, consider how many millions of
dollars the company would have to pay out to give people that
treatment. It seems reasonable indeed for the president of my insurance
company to have personally pocketed a few hundreds of millions here or
there -- I cannot imagine the stress of keeping up with proper utensil
etiquette during a time when those you insure are doing you the
constant insult of actually getting sick.
So, Mr. President, I write to you with this demand: we are not a
socialist country, one which believes the health of its citizens should
come without the proper profit-loss determinations. I believe that my
healthcare decisions should be between me, my insurance company plan,
my insurance company's list of approved doctors I am allowed to see and
treatments I am allowed to get, my insurance company's claims
department, the insurance company doctors who have never met me, spoken
to me or even personally looked at my files, my own preexisting
conditions, my insurance company's crack cost-review and retroactive
cancellation and denial squads, my insurance company's executives and
board of directors, my insurance company's profit requirements, the
shareholders, my employer, and my doctor.
Anything else would be insulting.
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