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On Birth, Pregnancy, and Parenting

If some insurance companies have their way, a cesarean section will soon be considered a pre-existing medical condition, which in turn is going to render millions of women either un-insurable, or left paying drastically increased medical premiums. Why do I think this is unfair? Because of my own personal experiences with the births of my children. Now that I have had two cesarean sections, is my husbands insurance through work going to change their mind and tell us one day that I am un-insurable?
This is a reason I support an overhaul of our health care system. The laws that currently surround our medical insurance, and these big bucks insurance companies need to be reformed and become stricter, as well as a huge needed reform to the medical malpractice laws so Doctors, especially OB/GYN’s can stop practicing something that is now being called defensive medicine.

I came across an article about cesarean sections being considered a pre-existing medical condition, and I wanted to share that. There are more than a couple statements in this article that I find disturbing as a woman in her child baring years.

“The point of insurance is to insure against catastrophic care costs. That’s what you’re trying to aggregate and pool for such things as heart attacks and cancer,” said an Anthem Blue Cross spokesman. “Having a child is a matter of choice. Dealing with an adult onset illness, such as diabetes, heart disease breast or prostate cancer, is not a matter of choice.” – According to  Anthem Blue Cross.

Having a child, for many women, is just a part of life. While the pro choice movement has made it clear that all women have the choice to continue or terminate a pregnancy, that choice has no baring on a woman choosing to have a child. These same insurance companies have no issue throwing money at viagra and unnecessary medications that are for men though.  Pregnancy is a normal and until recently a common biological function for millions of women, why should they be punished if they make the choice to become a parent?

When a woman isn’t currently pregnant, she often still cannot get coverage. Many insurers consider a Caesarean-section pregnancy a pre-existing condition and refuse to cover women who have had the procedure. From a 2008 New York Times story about a Colorado woman who had Golden Rule Insurance:

She was turned down because she had given birth by Caesarean section. Having the operation once increases the odds that it will be performed again, and if she became pregnant and needed another Caesarean, Golden Rule did not want to pay for it. A letter from the company explained that if she had been sterilized after the Caesarean, or if she were over 40 and had given birth two or more years before applying, she might have qualified.

Now this boils down to insurance companies making these choices for mothers, instead of women being allowed to make their own informed medical decision unless they want to pay out of pocket. Now I can tell you, after my second child was born, I obtained a copy of what my insurance was billed for my cesarean section, and 3 1/2 day hospital stay. $15,600.  Believe it or not, a medical bill like this, in reality, would bankrupt a family in today’s society. With the current economy, the unstable job market, and the questionable banking and housing industry… we shouldn’t have to be worrying about simple things like our medical coverage.

Now I will bring this back to why we need to reform health care. Right now in the US we have something I like to call “sick care” not “health care”. People only go to the doctor when they are sick because that is what insurance will cover. Preventive care like Chiropractors, which are proven to help for many illnesses and overall just staying healthy, are not being covered by many insurances, or you are only given X amount of visits for a year. I know my insurance only covered 34 visits for a year, and during my pregnancy alone, I went to the Chiropractor almost triple that amount.
Just another reason there is a serious need for an overhaul.

The number of cesarean sections are increasing yearly. An example, in 2007 39.40% of all births at Stamford Hospital were cesarean sections. That increased in the 2008 fiscal year to 43.35%. That is a huge jump for one calendar year. These numbers are not only sad, but they are dangerous. The World Health Organizations says that a safe cesarean section rate for mothers and babies in The United States is 10-15% at most. The amount of cesarean sections has risen in the United States for 11 years in a row, and I have no doubt it will increase next year also, dispite large name organizations such as The American Medical Association saying that the rated needs to be reduced.

What is your take on all this?

Tags: cesarean, section, c-section, insurance, health, health care, reform

Add A Comment

Comments:

gypsy...
Sep. 18, 2009 at 9:39 PM

If doctors weren't so c-sec happy, the rate would be lower, and the insurance companies would have no reason to screw us over.

CTRed...
Sep. 19, 2009 at 9:49 AM

Not only the doctors, but the malpractice insurance companies not allowing certain doctors and hospitals to do VBAC. The local hospital I spoke of in this artcile, has a VBAC rate of 1.74% with tha that 43.35% cesarean rate. That is a key problem also.

(Original Poster)

ethan...
Sep. 19, 2009 at 11:32 AM

I think most normal, sane people will acknowledge that the U.S. is in dire need of health care reform. This issue comes down to deciding HOW to do the reform.

I find it heartbreaking that the companies may find a way to not cover women through pregnancy, but unfortunatly they aren't entirely wrong for calling it a pre-exisiting condition. After a C-section, any subsequent pregnancy results in another c-section due to their already having a c-section. Only a small amount of women opt for a VBAC.

CTRed...
Sep. 19, 2009 at 11:48 AM

Ethans, that is the problem, during the 1980's and 1990's women elected to have VBAC's OVER repeat cesareans. Now the medical community is MAKING the choice for these women by not allowing VBAC in certain hospitals, or doctors simply not doing them. That is the problem, not the mothers driving the rates up. Also, women are not being given reall informed consent for repeat cesareans, if they knew all of their risks as well as the risks to their baby, they probably would not make the choice to have an elective medically unnecessary cesarean section.

The women who are becoming statistics are the ones having unnecessary primarty cesarean sections. Then they are "tainted" or "scarred" for their child baring years.

(Original Poster)

NDFan...
Sep. 19, 2009 at 3:58 PM

My take in this is that it's BULLSHIT!  I'm so enraged by the thought that my healthcare could be taken away that I can't even formulate all of the thoughts in my head!!  It's not my fault that my OB pushed an unnecessary c-section on me my telling me I would kill my child!  I've had my VBAC and proven I'm not a liability to insurance companies.  If this goes through I'm done with the US and moving my happy ass up to Canada.

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