-- Advertisement --

Pre-Existing Conditions and Health Care Reform

Neccessary reforms or free-market intrusions?
medical bills

There are three different classes of people in the health care marketplace in the United States: those receiving employer provided-health insurance, those who individually acquire health plans and those who remain uninsured.

Each group has a different stake in the outcome of health care reform. While costs impact all three, some crucial issues only affect one segment of the health care population, and “exclusions” and “rescissions” are important issues for those who purchase health care individually.

So-called “exclusions” typically relate to pre-existing conditions. Thus, in buying a health care policy, the insured is typically unable to obtain coverage that will pay for medical care as it relates to a pre-existing condition. This is less frequently an issue for the younger segment of the individual insurance market, such as college graduates, who are young and, statistically speaking, not yet burdened with many illnesses. Although if you are 22 and have a medical condition, you will face the reality of not having insurance for that condition unless you are employed by a company that provides insurance. Employer-provided plans generally do not have any pre-existing illness exclusions, but such employment may not be available in all fields or areas of the country, and especially in the current economic climate, many young people are graduating from college without full-time employment prospects in the near term.

Older Americans, not yet eligible for Medicare, are in a very difficult situation when in comes to purchasing individual insurance. They seek insurance in order to protect them from high costs in case of catastrophic illness, but also to aid in the payment for care related to typical illnesses and conditions that afflict people as they age.

Insurance companies are private, for profit, businesses. They compete to obtain clients who are healthy and who will pay the most premiums while requiring the least care, doing this through marketing campaigns, but also through exclusion of pre-existing conditions. Customers do not have good options, and deciding to not purchase insurance and relying on public health facilities and emergency room care can be risky and inconvenient.

One of the goals of President Barack Obama’s reform proposals is to eliminate exclusions for pre-existing conditions in individual insurance plans. This will interfere in the free-market private decision making of insurance companies, but it will be a risk born by all equally. In fact, insurance company executives have at times spoken out in favor of elimination of exclusions so long as it was done in a way that affected all insurers equally.

“Rescission” relates to "exclusion" because it refers to the cancellation of insurance when the insurer determines that the insured was not accurate in the insurance application. This is typically done when the insurer discovers that the insured person seeks payments for conditions that were pre-existing but were not revealed in the application. However, insurers also cancel contracts when they find technicalities in the applications that do not relate to pre-existing illnesses. For example, if someone failed to mention that he/she had a knee condition in his/her application, but then submitted an insurance claim related to heart surgery that was otherwise covered, the insurance company might research the insured’s medical history in search of any inconsistencies which would allow them to cancel insurance and avoid payment on the costly heart surgery.

During testimony by insurance company executives last week, outraged congressmen demanded that insurance companies stop rescissions based on technicalities. However, all three executives at the hearing refused to make that commitment. This is another issue likely to be worked over by legislators as they craft reform packages.

 
COMMENTS & DISCUSSION (32) COMMENTS
Karen
Jul. 06, 2009
11:30 AM EDT
As a Minnesota resident; I am embrassed to have this man say he represents me. I also feel disenfranchised by the way the recount was handled; we should've called for a new election. It's just wrong all the way around.

Karen
Jul. 06, 2009
11:30 AM EDT
As a Minnesota resident, I am embrassed to see this man holding himself out as representing me. I also feel disenfranchised by the manner in which the whole election was scammed. I believe we should have been offered a new election.

M.C. (Michael) Callahan
Jul. 06, 2009
11:30 AM EDT
Having the government involved in our health care is like having our government involved with religion. If the government would have monitored the health care industry, as it was their original responsibility, the system would not be in the disarray that we all must face at this time. This entire subject has been taken over by greed and a quest for power and no longer has anything to do with our health and a patient's rights, or to make decisions about ones owns health concerns. If the government can't police itself in the name of the people, as it was originally designed to do, then where is the logic in letting the government, wreek havic on yet another section of our society.

Madeleine Tector
Jul. 06, 2009
11:30 AM EDT
My husband is 76, he had a triple by-pass 7 years ago he is now on medication and doing very well, if he gets sick again his insurance would still pay but he would not be able to get new medical insurance and be able to keep his union insurance, so he would be forced to go along with the national health care plan which, obviously, would not take care of his condition the same way as private insurance, he would die. This sounds really great and the only thing I can think of to combat this is a passport out of this country. This health care plan would be OK if all of the senate and congress and the Obama family would use it exclusively too, thats not going to happen. .

William G Sowa
Jul. 06, 2009
11:30 AM EDT
This behavior by the for profit insurance companies is to be expected because of the for profit basis of their business. Human nature forces individuals to operate in their own selfish interests. Only an expansion of Medicare for all will stop these evils. Paid for by large tax increases on people who have large incomes with large personal wealth. This will give everyone a balance of power to negotiate fairness for all.

michael lewandowski
Jul. 06, 2009
11:30 AM EDT
We need to determine what is "affordable" health care and what is "good" health care. Then make sure it stays that way or heaven forbid, better health care in terms of "affordable" and "good" health care. That remains to be seen or accomplished.

Ernest Toseland
Jul. 06, 2009
11:30 AM EDT
Get the Goverment and employers out of health care! Why should everyones health care costs go up so those that failed to care for their health or engaged in high risk lifestyles get free care? This is not a communiest country yet! Pay employeeys their full cost and have them pay their own way and buy insurance to cover catastrophic costs. This will lead to lower costs and higher quility in a free market. Free will charity will help those in need not Goverment thugs stelling from everone to care for those that refuse to care for themselfs.

Hanna
Jul. 06, 2009
11:30 AM EDT
Politicians should have the same insurance the rest of us have. How quick would things get taken care of then?

Cobra Help Center
Jul. 08, 2009
11:30 AM EDT
This new reform will only hurt the economy as Insurance is the idea of healthy people grouping together to protect themselves from a major financial loss. The idea of insurance is not to bring in lots of sick people into the pool as then the healthy are paying for the sick automatically, not in the future and carriers can not build up enough collateral to protect themselves from the loses. Anyway, COBRA already allows for those displaced by losing a job to get Major Medical insurance no matter if they even have pre-existing conditions like cancer. Great article, will be interesting to see where the health insurance industry falls into Obama's plans.

charles sears
Jul. 22, 2009
10:30 AM EDT
leeting obama have control of healthcare is like putting the fox in the henhouse he doesnt care about any of us he is on a power trip he wants to be remembered just like FDR he wants to be the great messiah which of course he is not far from it if he gets all he wants we will all be in the poorhouse mark my words!!!

bill fitz
Jul. 27, 2009
10:45 AM EDT
the reason there was no gov. ins. is it will not work

Connie
Aug. 17, 2009
10:45 AM EDT
We much have some kind of health care reform that is fair and not greedy, to meet everyone health care needs. It seems to me it is easy to sit back and complain about the reform package, yet not address cost of coverage that most struggle to keep up with. I am for the reform we have other states to look at and learn what could be a better, fair system that is cost efficient across the board. This is my hope and other I have talked with on this very hot issue.

dennis
Aug. 21, 2009
05:00 PM EDT
cobra only lasts for 18 months.. i personally hope all you that are against healthcare reform lose your jobs for 18+ months then you will know what it is like for some of us. open medicare for all and we solve the problem overnite.

maxhnb
Sep. 18, 2009
04:30 PM EDT
If you believe what the critics of healthcare say rather than do your own research you are a fool. Contact some people who live in Canada or UK and ask them about the healthcare. They will tell you it has probelms not dissimilar from the US. That the lies you hear ar just that. I have lived in Canada and the care was excellent. I have epilepsy, osteoarthritis and heart problems. I have no problem getting care. Private insurance, depending on how much you pay gives you care. By the way the current plan encourages you to keep your own insurance if you are happy with it. If you arent, there will be options.

Brenda
Oct. 02, 2009
10:45 AM EDT
The Government Lies ! How many times since his Inaguration has President Obama broken his word ? Plenty !!! The man is a Socialist and will ruin this Country ! America is Freedom, the Freedom to Choose what we want and what we don't want ! As of Today, I am uninsured. Why?? Because my insurance was increased almost $200.00, after I injured my back by lifting my grandchild. I cannot afford the extra $200.00, so I guess I will be one of the people they will put in Jail !! I am scared to death, I have always had Health Insurance and now I am forced to be out in the cold, without protection! I do not believe one word that is being said on Capitol Hill, whatever they say, it will change tomorrow ! A Politican will Lie to his own Mother, then give her that infamous pain pill President Obama was talking about, instead of the needed medical treatment !! Get rid of the Corruption and lower the fees for insurance ! We Senior Citizens' Will Not Be Sacraficed for the Good of the Mother Land !!!!

victoriadesmond
Oct. 08, 2009
10:30 AM EDT
I have just created a speach on Medicaid Reform for my class in College. I would suggest any one listen to some facts which will prove that we as a Nation are already carrying individuals without insurance on Medicaid. I just want to uncover how people are already using Medicaid. It is the government that wants us to believe otherwise. Let us put into perspective what truly is going on in everyday life. If you are interested here is the URL:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koDoYjPWp64

Patty
Oct. 12, 2009
11:00 AM EDT
There needs to be a unifying system in place for health care, because in a modern technically advanced society such as ours it is more akin to a basic human right than a market commodity. We need to reevaluate this free market, willy-nilly, let-them-eat-cake, what ever-the-market, what-ever-we-can-get-away-with nonsense that is practised now by the Health Insurance Industry. Because lets face it: the death panels are already at work in the back offices of large private insurers. We probably wouldn' t need to go to the extreme of a public option to make healthcare fair and available for all, but the history of large corporations policing themselves and doing what is truly fair and equitable by their clientele will probably necessitate this outcome afterall.

G Salter
Oct. 14, 2009
10:45 AM EDT
I am 41 and have never engaged in a high risk lifestyle. I am a mother of 4. 3 of my pregnancies were paid for by medicare. However, my income is too high to qualify for government insurance other than when I am pregnant. I was diagnosed diabetic at 20 and was too young and too poor to have health care. Not to mention, The Dr never told me, "before I diagnose you, you better run out and get insurance because you will never qualify for it again." My husband is self employeed. Insurance is not tax deductible. Insurance for my family would be over 2,000 per month. My diabetes would not be covered for a year. I need help and I need health care. I am having complications and I do not want to die and leave my little children alone. Go health care reform!

Brenda
Oct. 28, 2009
10:45 AM EDT
I am sorry, for every person who says Universal Health Care is the the answer and that we have been told lies about England and Canada, I suggest that you read some of Britain's News Papers. I recently went on a search for the facts on Britian's Health Care System. I found that people are dying because they cannot get prompt treatment or the drugs that we are able to receive here in the U.S. ! Great Britian is in a discussion about dismantleing its Universal Health Care System and Canada and Germany have or are in the midst of filing Bankruptsy. It that a sign of a well oiled machine that works for the people? We are being treated as if we haven't a brain in our heads or worse, like unrulely children who can't possibly know our own minds ! Do we really want the U.S. Government involved in our private lives, telling us how to eat, how to live our lives, how much to exercise and when we can go to the Bloody LOO ! Give me an ever loving break ! The American People have always been independent, rugged individualists, what has happened to us ? Do we not know how to standup to our own Government and throw the Bums out ? What is needed is to eliminate the corruption associated with the Health Insurance Companies and Health Industry, by charging outrageous fees. Everyone is familar with the outrageous charges on hospital bills, ie, $10.00 for a box of kleenex, let's say. This needs to be monitered and stopped. I have Never had a major health episode, yet, because I am not a size 2 anymore, which I was as a young woman and because I have reached my retirement years , the insurance companies raised my health insurance $200.00 in 1 year. I cannot afford it ! So what do I do ? The only thing I can do, cancel it and pray! The Insurance Company tells me to eliminate my medications, some of which I can not get rid of and my health factor will go down. What happens to the conditions the medication is prescribed for, if I do that ? Well, I suspect they will get worse and I will have excerbated problems if I followed their recommendations! That's right, take that little pain pill President Obama talks about so cavalierly and without an effort ! Is That what we pay these Companies Thousands of dollars a year for ? What happened to those Thousands of dollars I paid in for the said Protection of my health for over 40 years?? I haven't used it much, where is it, where is my refund ? This is extortion plain and simple! Protection Money paid to a modern-day Mobster, the Health

Kim
Oct. 29, 2009
01:45 PM EDT
My employer provides insurance, but it's the kind that if you have a significant claim, you quickly exceed the lifetime limit. It has a $3,000 per year deductible, and a $250,000 LIFETIME limit. In the 3 1/2 days he spent in intensive care before he died, his bill exceeded $265,000. Had he lived, he would be uninsurable. If the insurance company had been successful in their "investigation" aimed at finding a pre-existing condition or inaccuracies in our application, I would be bankrupt. As it is, I "only" had six months of anxiety waiting for them to pay up. It became very clear to me during that time exactly why 80% of the medically-related bankruptcies in this country happen to people who HAVE health insurance. I can hardly wait for Medicare! Now that I realize that only one short hospitalization with the private health insurance I currently pay for can leave me out in the cold, I would much prefer a private option. We were just informed that our premiums are going up 15% next year, our deductible will be $3,500, and the cap of $250,000 lifetime will stay the same. I keep getting less and less for my money, and I have been paying into the system for a lifetime, with virtually no claims until this year! If we can't have a public option, then force health insurance back to a non-profit status, and rescind their anti-trust exemption. The problems all started when the health insurance companies discovered their robber baron potential. Now they are starting to penalize people for being overweight with a surcharge. When will it end? The system obviously is not working. It is as sick as the people the insurance companies leave out in the cold. Our system is rated lower than many third-world countries! It's a moral issue. Jesus never asked a leper for a co-pay!

Vicki
Nov. 06, 2009
11:00 AM EST
Pre-Existing conditions should be removed as a way for insurance providers to exclude people. If someone can afford health care and want health insurance they should not be excluded because they are pregnant, had a C-section, appendicitis, or asthma. We need fairness restored in health care. Compassion sure won't hurt either. I hated Bush, so too bad if you people hate President Obama. Republicans are the party of we don't give a darn about you. We just care about rich people and corporations and ourselves.

Nett
Jan. 05, 2010
11:45 AM EST
Why can't the government issue the law that force the insurance company to accept pre-existing condition. Doesn't pre-existing condition have the human right? How can Insurance company turn down pre-existing condition?

AwakeInSeattle
Jan. 19, 2010
10:45 AM EST
Here's an example why people are frustrated with government. WA DC is working to eliminate exclusion for pre-existing conditions at the same time WA ST is in a hurry to implement a new product that will keep costs down by using exclusion for pre-existing conditions. The Health Care Authority seems to be using this "new product" as a jobs program in case the subsidized program is not restored. Those enrolled in Basic Health can not afford the new rates when the cost of everything in King County is going up.

CF Mother
Jan. 19, 2010
11:00 AM EST
Twenty years ago our cheery toddler was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis. Afraid, we dug into the medical research to understand the disease that threatened his future. We healed through optimism, roused by the news eight days after his diagnosis that the gene that causes CF had been found, opening the door toward a cure. We knew that our heroes, the researchers and his doctors, would continue to find ways to protect his future. We were no longer afraid of CF. The fear that woke me in the night was of losing our health insurance because our son was on every insurer’s no-fly list. While my husband’s profession was periodically roiled by layoffs, he decided against the security of opening his own firm because the cost of carrying coverage for our eldest son was too high, the thread on which his health care dangled too slight. With luck, we made it through our son’s childhood without a gap in coverage. Now 22, he’s kept his health thanks to his medical care and his own glorious determination not to allow CF to cramp his style. He earned his black belt, went to college, joined a fraternity, and drives a 1961 Buick LeSabre. He spent a year in China, learned Mandarin, and discovered that even the drug that enables CF patients to digest food couldn’t help him digest raw sea cucumber. He backpacked through Thailand, had his wallet and passport stolen, but managed to hang on to his meds. This spring he will graduate with a degree in biochemical engineering. His resume includes summers researching the transmembrane conductance regulator, the protein channel in our cells that, when malformed, causes cystic fibrosis. We can’t wait to see what this kid is going to do next. Next, however, has filled me with that old middle-of-the night fear. Our son will age off our family policy in April. He must shape his future not according to his dreams and ability, but in ways that will ensure that he keeps his health insurance. He must find an employer with health benefits that will hire a new college graduate in a poor economy. Or he must extend his full-time student status until he’s 25, putting off career plans and his desire to support himself. Despite his wanderlust and world-wide opportunities, he must remain a resident of Massachusetts, an isolated island where CF patients are not pariahs to health insurance companies. I tell our story not because it is unique. Other families have been harmed, rather than merely threatened, by the ruthlessness of American health insurance. I tell it to ask a question. It is for you, the person reading this who does not wish the current effort to reform health care to succeed, who calls it “Obamacare” and “socialized medicine”. Help me understand your position, because I am mystified. Are you a parent? Do you know that the bill under debate will prevent insurers from dumping people with pre-existing conditions, like my son or, perhaps, someone in your family? Do

Nell
Feb. 23, 2010
02:31 PM EST
We pay for health care all over the world,free. But the U>S> has none. We should have free health care for all that are u.s. citizens and nothing for other people in the rest of the world.if we can't afford health care for the world ,oh well! country first! We can afford it. We just can't give it and other money to the world. Also republicans work for the people here or get out, I'm sick of you wanting the power but care nothing for the people in the U.S.

Regina Miller
Mar. 25, 2010
01:25 PM EDT
I am a mom of 2, and I have been out of work since the birth of my oldest. Even as I speak, my private heatlh insurance through my husband for my kids are delving into my son's medical history to try and claim that we lied or left out information on his health history, and not wanting to cover any of their health care expenses. I have not had health insurance, myself, in over 4 years, since the birth of my oldest son. Before I had coverage through my work; I worked in a nuclear pharmacy, in radiation every day, and am afraid I have symptoms of thyroid cancer. I have been UNinsurable due to pre-existing conditions, though, b/c of a misdiagnosis of bi-polar disorder 7 years ago. I do not have any options. I've been trying to get insurance for years, before I had any health problems, yet with a 'mental' history, which was really just stress and anxiety, I have been turned down. This country needs health care reform. I feel for the hundreds of thousands out there in much worse situations, the children with pre-existing conditions, exceeding of limits, being dropped after paying for benefits for so many years, so many that need this reform. I only wish that this could have passed sooner. I hope that it passes now.

Scott
Mar. 25, 2010
01:25 PM EDT
Insurance companies could not survive without denying people due to pre-existing conditions. The idea behind insurance (a very socialist idea) is that we all pool our money together, and then when someone needs it they get to use it. If hundreds of people join our group and none of them have paid into it, and then they all need the money, insurance just wouldn't survive. This isn't to say there aren't manipulations and trickery going on within the insurance industry. But forcing insurance companies to take people with pre-existing conditions will raise costs/premiums for EVERYONE.

Diana Behrend
May. 05, 2010
11:03 AM EDT
It is not really true that government and health care don't mix. It has been proven over and over in many country's that this is not true. Cuba of all places has a lower mortality statistic than us. Maybe we should educate ourselves better before we lash out on socialized medicine. Do we really have to buy in to the B.S. that the insurance company's and drug company's brainwash us with. Aren't these the people that are killing us and keep us broke? Ask yourself just that?

KATHLEEN SEARS
Jul. 20, 2010
05:00 PM EDT
I AM A 60 YEAR OLD WIDOW. I HAVE ALWAYS HAD HEALTH INSURANCE, I HAD TO GO TO WORK WHEN MY HUSBAND DIED, SO I HAD TO GIVE UP THE HEALTH INSURANCE I HAD WITH BGE BECAUSE THE COMPANY I WORKED FOR HAD HEALTH INSURANCE. SO I LOST MY JOB AND NOW I HAVE NO HEALTH INSURANCE. I HAVE TOO MUCH MONEY TO GET HELP AND NOT ENOUGH MONEY TO AFFORD STATE INSURANCE. I HAVE A PREEXISTING CONDITION SO I WAS TURNED DOWN FOR INSURANCE. SO NOW WHAT I AM 60 AT AN AGE WHERE I NEED INSURANCE THE MOST, AND WITHOUT IT FOR THE FIRST TIME IN MY LIFE. THE UNITED STATES SHOULD BE ASHAMED OF THEMSELVES FOR THE WAY THEY TAKE CARE OF THEIR CITIZENS. YOU WORK ALL OF YOUR LIFE, AND THIS IS WHERE YOU END UP. I PRAY EVERYDAY THAT I DON'T GET SICK OR HAVE AN ACCIDENT, BECAUSE HOW WILL I PAY THE HOSPITAL BILL OR DO I JUST SIT HERE AND LET MYSELF DIE, BECAUSE I HAVE LIFE INSURANCE BUT NOT HEALTH INSURANCE SO I CAN AFFORD TO BE BURRIED BUT NOT TO GET SICK

Mary Muscarella
Jul. 20, 2010
05:01 PM EDT
It is easy for people who have health insurance to sit back and complain about the reform. If you have health insurance, great for you but there are millions of Americans who don't who can't even get it because of a preexisting condition, such as diabetes. Everyone deserves the right to health care and to live a long, healthy life. A dear friend of mine has diabetes and is middle class and he can't even get health insurance because of his preexisting condition. He has to pay for everything out of pocket. Is this fair? Should he have to spend everything he makes just to stay healthy because of the greed of insurance companies? For those of you complaining, keep your private health insurance. Your lucky they will sell it to you. But what gives you the right to complain about others who deserve to be taken care of too receiving health care. Go Obama!!!! You have my vote in 2012!

mbt shoes cheap
Jul. 20, 2010
05:02 PM EDT
Really nice and impressive blog i found today.

Ann
Aug. 16, 2010
04:30 PM EDT
I am one of those in between ages that does not qualify for medicare and was laid off and early retired. I kept my group plan through my former employer but it is still expensive and when I tried to get individual coverage, I was denied because of pre-existing conditions. I can't believe it because I consider myself healthy. The fact that I had an operation recently to remove a benign tumor and will not have to have any more MRI's makes me a bad risk I guess. If the insurance companies are turning down healthy people like me, I can't imagine the number of unhealthy people they deny to whom they deny coverage.

Share your thoughts on the story by adding your comments below. Comments containing profanity, derogatory language, or any form of advertisement will not be approved. Comments will be reviewed by the site's editorial team, so your post may not appear for up to 24 hours. Thank you for your patience.

POST YOUR RESPONSE
 
 
Balance of Power

Track the United States government with updates on the three branches of government.

The Issues