The Real Reason That The Cancer Patient Writing In Today’s Wall Street Journal Lost Her Insurance
Mondays Wall Street Journal features an op-ed from Edie Littlefield Sundby, a stage-4 gallbladder cancer survivor who wont be able to keep the coverage she currently has. Her insurer, United Healthcare, is pulling out of the individual health care market, forcing Sundby to find new coverage in Californias health care exchange.
But the plans available through Cover California dont offer in-network coverage for all of the care Sundby needs. As a result, she has to choose between her two health care providers if she wishes to remain in-network. Stanford has kept me alivebut UCSD has provided emergency and local treatment support during wretched periods of this disease, and it is where my primary-care doctors are, she writes:
But Sundby shouldnt blame reform United Healthcare dropped her coverage because theyve struggled to compete in Californias individual health care market for years and didnt want to pay for sicker patients like Sundby.
The company, which only had 8,000 individual policy holders in California out of the two million who participate in the market, announced (along with a second insurer, Aetna) that it would be pulling out of the individual market in May. The company could not compete with Anthem Blue Cross, Blue Shield of California and Kaiser Permanente, who control more than 80 percent of the individual market. Over the years, it has become more difficult to administer these plans in a cost-effective way for our members, UnitedHealth spokeswoman Cheryl Randolph explained. We will continue to keep a major presence in California, focusing instead on large and small employers.
http://thinkprogress.org/health/2013/11/04/2881581/wall-street-journal-horror-story-cancer-patient-losing-doctors-wrong/
I imagine there are thousands of stories with similar cause.