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Rape Victim's Choice: Risk AIDS or Health Insurance?

Denied Coverage

Huffington Post Investigative Fund   First Posted: 3/18/10 Updated: 5/25/11

Christina Turner feared that she might have been sexually assaulted after two men slipped her a knockout drug. She thought she was taking proper precautions when her doctor prescribed a month's worth of anti-AIDS medicine.

Only later did she learn that she had made herself all but uninsurable.

Turner had let the men buy her drinks at a bar in Fort Lauderdale. The next thing she knew, she said, she was lying on a roadside with cuts and bruises that indicated she had been raped. She never developed an HIV infection. But months later, when she lost her health insurance and sought new coverage, she ran into a problem.

Turner, 45, who used to be a health insurance underwriter herself, said the insurance companies examined her health records. Even after she explained the assault, the insurers would not sell her a policy because the HIV medication raised too many health questions. They told her they might reconsider in three or more years if she could prove that she was still AIDS-free.

Stories of how victims of sexual assault can get tangled in the health insurance system have been one result of the Huffington Post Investigative Fund's citizen journalism project, which is calling on readers to provide information and anecdotes about the inner workings of the insurance industry. The project aims to uncover details and data that can inform the larger debate over how to fix the nation's health care system. As the Investigative Fund reported in September, health insurance companies are not required to make public their records on how often claims are denied and for what reasons.

Some women have contacted the Investigative Fund to say they were deemed ineligible for health insurance because they had a pre-existing condition as a result of a rape, such as post traumatic stress disorder or a sexually transmitted disease. Other patients and therapists wrote in with allegations that insurers are routinely denying long-term mental health care to women who have been sexually assaulted.

Susan Pisano, spokeswoman for the health insurance industry's largest trade group, America's Health Insurance Plans, said insurers do not discriminate against victims of sexual assault and ordinarily would not even know if a patient had been raped.

"These issues you are bringing up, they deserve to be brought up," said Pisano. "People who have experienced rape and sexual assault are victims and we want them to be in a system where everyone is covered."

Turner's story about HIV drugs is not unusual, said Cindy Holtzman, an insurance agent and expert in medical billing at Medical Refund Service, Inc. of Marietta, Ga. Insurers generally categorize HIV-positive people as having a pre-existing condition and deny them coverage. Holtzman said that health insurance companies also consistently decline coverage for anyone who has taken anti-HIV drugs, even if they test negative for the virus. "It's basically an automatic no," she said.

Pisano, of the insurance trade group, said: "If you put down on a form that you are or were taking anti-HIV drugs at any time, they [the insurance companies] are going to understand that you are or were in treatment for HIV, period," she said. "That could be a factor in determining whether you get coverage."

Some doctors and nurses said that the industry's policy is not medically sound. "The chance of a rape victim actually contracting AIDS is very low. It doesn't make any sense to use that as a calculus for determining who get health insurance," said Dr. Alex Schafir, faculty instructor at Providence St. Vincent Hospital in Portland, Ore.

Nurses who deal with sexual assault cases say the industry's policy creates a significant problem for those treating women who have been assaulted. "It's difficult enough to make sure that rape victims take the drugs," said Diana Faugno, a forensic nurse in California and board director of End Violence Against Women International. "What are we supposed to tell women now? Well, I guess you have a choice - you can risk your health insurance or you can risk AIDS. Go ahead and choose."

Turner, now a life and casualty insurance agent, said she went without health coverage for three years after the attack. She second-guesses her decision to take the HIV drugs. "I'm going to be penalized my whole life because of this," she said.

Several women told the Investigative Fund that after being sexually assaulted they had been denied care or ruled ineligible for health insurance because of what were deemed pre-existing conditions stemming from their assaults -- particularly post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.

A 38-year-old woman in Ithaca, N.Y., said she was raped last year and then penalized by insurers because in giving her medical history she mentioned an assault she suffered in college 17 years earlier. The woman, Kimberly Fallon, told a nurse about the previous attack and months later, her doctor's office sent her a bill for treatment. She said she was informed by a nurse and, later, the hospital's billing department that her health insurance company, Blue Cross Blue Shield, not only had declined payment for the rape exam, but also would not pay for therapy or medication for trauma because she "had been raped before."

Fallon says she now has trouble getting coverage for gynecological exams. To avoid the hassle of fighting with her insurance company, she goes to Planned Parenthood instead and pays out of pocket.

A New Mexico woman told the Investigative Fund she was denied coverage at several health insurance companies because she had suffered from PTSD after being attacked and raped in 2003. She did not want to disclose her name because she feared that she would lose her group health insurance if she went on the record as a rape victim. "I remember just feeling infuriated," she said.

"I think it's important to point out that health plans are not denying coverage based on the fact that someone was raped," said Pisano of the insurance trade group. "But PTSD could be a factor in denied coverage."

"That might not be a discriminatory action, but it certainly would seem to have a discriminatory impact," said Sandra Park, staff attorney at the Women's Rights Project at the American Civil Liberties Union. "Insurance discrimination against rape victims will only further discourage them from coming forward to law enforcement and seeking medical help."

Even when patients have coverage, there are fundamental disagreements between insurance companies and doctors about what mental health treatment is medically necessary. The Investigative Fund spoke with doctors, psychologists, and licensed clinical social workers around the country who work regularly with victims of sexual assault. They said that their patients have been experiencing an increase in delays and denials, particularly for talk therapy.

"There's a lot of anger about this in the medical community," said Dr. George Shapiro-Weiss, a psychiatrist in Middletown, Conn. "You don't realize what an Alice in Wonderland web this has become."

"A lot of my patients are being told that their treatment isn't medically necessary," said Keri Nola, an Orlando, Fla., psychologist, who said about 75 percent of her patients are victims of sexual violence.

Several therapists cited problems with managed care companies that specialize in mental health. Such firms generally work under contract with health insurers to hold down costs while still authorizing appropriate care.

WATCH a video about a rape victim's efforts to obtain mental health services:



Some therapists and patients said the managed care companies have cut off necessary treatment for sexual assault victims in the name of cost containment. "The companies are peppering them with questions about their symptoms, and about their histories, and asking, 'Well, are you sure you really need therapy?'" said Jeffrey Axelbank, a New Jersey psychologist. "For someone who has been traumatized, it can feel like another trauma, and it makes the therapy less effective."

Pisano, of the insurance association, said it was not fair to draw a larger pattern from such anecdotal evidence. "These situations are evaluated on a person-by-person basis," she said. "There is nothing routine about this."

Jim Wrich, a Madison, Wis., a consultant who helps employers evaluate the companies that manage their mental health care, said his work has made him wary of the industry. "This is absolutely routine - these denials," Wrich said. "The default position is to reject care."

Magellan Behavioral Health Services, Inc., one of the nation's largest managed-care companies with more than 58 million customers, said that it does not routinely turn down treatment requests from victims of sexual assault or other clients. "We're not denying care. We are exercising our responsibility to make sure that medical necessity is met," said Dr. Lawrence Nardozzi, Magellan's medical director. "I think the process works well."

Asked if cost is a factor in the company's decisions, Magellan spokeswoman Erin Somers said: "If all the safeguards are in place to determine whether treatment is medically necessary and appropriate" then "the cost takes care of itself."

A former care manager for Magellan said in an interview that she felt pressure to deny care for cost reasons. Lois Gorwitz, a psychologist with thirty years of experience who went to work for Magellan in California in 2000, said her superiors would tell her: "We are not denying this person treatment, we are denying them their benefit. If they want the treatment they can still pay out of pocket." But, Gorwitz said, "You know that means that the person is not going to get the treatment because they can't afford to pay out of pocket."

Gorwitz quit after two years. "It's a very uncomfortable feeling of not being able to offer help," she said.

Asked for a response, Magellan's Somers said, "I think you should keep in mind that there have been a lot of changes at Magellan in the last seven years. I think the people who work at Magellan now are not having that experience."

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Christina Turner feared that she might have been sexually assaulted after two men slipped her a knockout drug. She thought she was taking proper precautions when her doctor prescribed a month's worth ...
Christina Turner feared that she might have been sexually assaulted after two men slipped her a knockout drug. She thought she was taking proper precautions when her doctor prescribed a month's worth ...
 
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02:37 PM on 11/15/2009
I feel for all rape victims. However, supporting Obama and his health care plan will only create long lines, overworked doctors and nurses, lots of paper work and did I mention long waits for care. We currently live in a country where health care emergencie­s are available for all. If my child is sick, I can take him to the hospital and he is cared for. Regardless of the insurance coverage that I have. He will be treated. I do however agree that insurance companies need to realize that they work for us. We pay premiums to have coverage,d­eserve respect when we call them with a question about coverage and deserve to be covered with ANY preexistin­g condition. Universal health care will not fix this problem! New laws for Insurance companies will!
02:36 PM on 10/29/2009
OK, now I'm getting a clear read on where the insurance companies are headed with all this. In essence they consider "life" a preexistin­g condition.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kareness
Hello!
06:37 AM on 10/29/2009
So sad. Just heard a while back that if you've ever had an abusive spouse/par­tner anytime in your past, that is also a pre-existi­ng condition. Makes my heart break. It feels like sexism even though I know it's not. It just hurts on so many levels.

Health care reform can't come fast enough.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
elizlucinda
a mind is a terrible thing to waste
07:41 AM on 10/25/2009
If the U.S.is not going to adopt a public option, they should have a mechanism where a person can appeal the decisions made by Insurance Companies. This is done in Canada in regard to car insurance claims and it works well.
02:41 PM on 11/15/2009
We are America, where Canadian's come to receive quality health care. You are comparing health care to car insurance? Get a clue
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
elizlucinda
a mind is a terrible thing to waste
01:22 PM on 11/18/2009
Chfqueen..­.I live in a border city and let me assure you....the­re are few Canadians who travel to America to get health care unless they are very rich or treatment is unavalable in Canada. It doesn't happen that often.

Since we have a Government run system and not a privately run system, I used the analogy of car insurance because it is a privately run system...j­ust like your health care. Most privately run systems whether it is car insurance or health insurance have some sort of appeal system. If your health care provider doesn't have such a mechanism, that is wrong.

By the way..I would supect like most Americans you know very little about Canada...P­erhaps you could learn a little and top being such a snob!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zeeshan809
05:28 AM on 10/25/2009
Well that is why the big insurance companies should not be given the tax payers' money.
12:36 AM on 10/25/2009
This is just wrong.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Eldienne
Moderate Dem
02:45 PM on 10/24/2009
Another crazy health insurance story. Something should be done about this. So, unlike some posters on HP, I think that Health Care Reform with a Public Option could put a stop to this nonsense. It would make the health insurance industry stop denying people coverage for pre-existi­ng conditions­, among other things.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
katielady
08:00 PM on 10/24/2009
I can not imagine a worse horror to be heaped on a woman who was raped. As a victim back in the late 60s, police did little, except tell one to "move on and heal".. there really is no healing; but to regain one's health helps.. but to have to undergo insurance problems is inexcusabl­e.. absolutely inexcusabl­e.. a pox on these CEOs.
10:33 AM on 10/24/2009
If you report the rape, get your local Rape Crisis Center in on the case immediatel­y. If further treatment is needed after the rape exam, try to cross state lines and go to a clinic there. Ask the doctor for copies of the treatment records for your attorney. The purpose: Keep any and all records off MIB databases. Have your HIV testing done on community clinic days, pay cash, and use false names and SSN's.
If someone claims fraud later on, plead self-defen­se and file a civil rights lawsuit. I'd bet my next paycheck that insurance companies are allowing male rape victims' cases to go unharassed­.

While you're reading that great article on the beginnings of the Women's Movement, you might contemplat­e the bitter fact that insurance companies pooled lobbying money--big­, BIG money--to defeat the Equal Rights Amendment. If we pool our efforts to get them subject to antitrust laws, to get the public option and single-pay­er, heyyy, they made the rules, and we're playing with more hands in the game, if fewer dollars.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KristinNoelle
11:13 AM on 10/24/2009
Not bad advice..un­fortunate that a woman who was just raped should have to go through all that though.

I don't think a public option would help though. The public option that was proposed would have been a financial disaster. But I do think that there should be regulation­s in place that prevent insurance companies from dropping people because of a sexual assault...­or for any other reason beyond the individual­'s control.
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katielady
08:02 PM on 10/24/2009
Unfortunat­ely, while this is good info, it is after the fact .. and as one who has been a victim, the trauma is so overwhelmi­ng, you can't think of anything clearly...
04:10 AM on 10/24/2009
There was a time when working for Big Tobacco was viewed as the most despicable of employment­s. Now, with For-Profit Health Insurance Death Panels, The Prison-Ind­ustrial Complex, Predatory Banking and Finance, and Kleptocrat­ic Government­, Big Tobacco seems rather benign in comparison­. I guess I picked the wrong century to quit smoking.
02:25 AM on 10/24/2009
John McCain’s Internet Freedom Act Seeks To Block Net Neutrality­.

Does not matter if you are Democrat or republican on this one!!
mark my words: THIS WILL AMOUNT TO CENSORSHIP FOR ALL OF US!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KristinNoelle
12:13 AM on 10/24/2009
We can't control what happens to us. Despite our best efforts, some of us will get cancer, get in accidents, etc. I don't think it's right to punish people for things they cannot control. Insurance risk should be based on risks that people create, like smoking, drinking, and having a sedentary lifestyle. If someone shows up in the ER three times a year with alcohol poisoning, THAT is the type of person that should have to pay for their own care, not a woman who was assaulted.
03:00 AM on 10/24/2009
Bill them! That is what the rest of the "industria­lized world" does to non-citize­ns. Happened to my daughter. They would not release her until we paid $2,000. Hog-wash.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KristinNoelle
11:06 AM on 10/24/2009
I'm not entirely sure what you are talking about, but this post isn't about non-citize­ns.
11:58 AM on 10/24/2009
Where does one draw the line? Do you really know ANYONE that follows ALL the guidelines for healthy living, really? No one would be insured. Health care is a human right and everyone should be insured. Besides data changes daily about what is "healthy " and what is not. Its a social and educationa­l issue too. It costs more to eat healthy, join a gym, ect. People in poverty would be discrimina­ted against.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KristinNoelle
06:58 PM on 10/24/2009
I disagree. You do not need to join a gym to exercise, and if you shop right, you need not spend a lot of money on healthy food. Of course it would be impossible to invest a PERFECT risk assessment system, but that doesn't mean we should just tell everyone to do whatever they want. I'm not alone in thinking this way either. I'm currently working on a research project and thus far, about 72% of the respondent­s indicate that they feel insurance rates should be based on lifestyle factors.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
madisonhack
I prefer not to......
10:21 PM on 10/23/2009
My wife had a breast biopsy two weeks ago for a tiny lump that showed up on a routine mammogram. Because she has good health insurance, she was able to immediatel­y get an ultrasound of the area which more clearly showed the lump. It turned out to be the earliest stage and phase of breast cancer. The lump was removed and the first lymph gland was removed and examined for cancer. The results of that test were negative.

There will be no costly chemothera­py or radiation treatments or extensive surgery for this potentiall­y life-threa­tening condition. This is because our insurance was good enough to cover exams and procedures in a timely fashion that the uninsured do not enjoy.

Make no mistake about it - the health care debate is about whether you live or die.
08:57 PM on 10/24/2009
I'm thrilled with her positive prognosis. Of course there are no guarantees -- but that negative sentinel node is an excellent sign.

I had a stage one melanoma removed from my foot nine years ago. If I'd been without medical coverage at the time, there is no way I would have caught it so early. I had NO idea that it was even a "questiona­ble" lesion, but some unrelated foot pain sent me to a podiatrist who found the "bump" alarming and referred me immediatel­y to a dermatolog­ist who did a biopsy and a week later, did a wide excision. Cancer gone.

Without health coverage, I would be dead. It really is that simple.

I would never have gone to the podiatrist­, much less a dermatolog­ist, until the lesion had spread.

Remember this folks: no health coverage = early death.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
madisonhack
I prefer not to......
11:48 AM on 10/25/2009
Thanks.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mratcheson
04:03 PM on 10/25/2009
It's wonderful to hear your wife's story. And you are absolutely correct, the health care debate is a matter of life or death.
09:08 PM on 10/23/2009
After all, the United Health CEO's $700 million compensati­on doesn't grow on trees, you know
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SparkyGump
If only Obama really was a progressive...
07:14 PM on 10/23/2009
Last winter, I discovered a lump in my breast. Pretty weird for a guy, you know. Went to the doctor and was sent for a sonogram on my breast. Based on the findings from the sonogram, the radiologis­t sent me to have a mammogram. Pretty weird for a guy, you know! They said I had a mass that had to be removed as soon as possible. By this time, my right breast was three times the size of the left one! Pretty scary for anyone, you know! So, I had a mastectomy and they removed the mass. Luckily, it wasn't cancer.

Fast forward to TODAY; six months later, I get a letter from CIGNA telling me they are denying the claim because they don't consider my gynocomast­ia a medically necessary procedure! Amazing! Simply pure evil. Of course, I don't have that kind of money. Because of my disability­, I've had to buy a scooter, a special chair and now a special mattress just so I can get through my days and nights with as little pain as possible. Now CIGNA is making me pay over $5,000.00 I don't have!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
logicalchoice
logic is as logic does
05:15 PM on 10/23/2009
This is the reason i NEVER tell my doctor the truth. Do you smoke? NO! Do you drink? NO! Have you ever been sexually assaulted? NO! There is no doctor/pat­ient privilage anymore. You let it slip that you got sick before and the next thing you know, you can't get insurance.
06:46 PM on 10/24/2009
Ain't that a helluva thing!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JustMyWords
10:00 PM on 10/27/2009
But of course, on the down side is by the time you've had to lie to your doctor repeatedly about your medical history, you can no longer have any confidence that you're receiving appropriat­e medical care.