Insurance Runs Out For 12-Year-Old Boy Without Arm

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Huffington Post Investigative Fund   |  Danielle Ivory
First Posted: 11-16-09 06:45 PM   |   Updated: 11-17-09 01:25 PM

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Benjamin French was born with his right arm missing below the elbow. In his 12 years, he has been fitted with seven prostheses. His most recent replacement will cost nearly $30,000 and his doctor says he will soon grow out of it.

But, according to his insurance company, the boy is ineligible for further coverage of prosthetic devices because he has already spent his lifetime maximum benefit.

Benjamin's family happens to live in Michigan, one of 33 states where insurance companies are allowed to set annual and lifetime caps on prosthetic coverage. The family's policy with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan covers a maximum of $30,000 per lifetime for prosthetics, plus $1,000 per year for repairs. In states such as Colorado and Maryland, the law says there can be no such cap on prosthetics.

"It seems really unfair," said Benjamin's mother, Kristen French. "The insurance company can do this in one state, but not in another? It's ridiculous."

The French family represents one small part of a health care system rife with inequities and inconsistencies: Some people have insurance, some do not. [Clarification Nov. 17, 2009: Original language implied Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan is a for-profit insurer; it is nonprofit.] For those who are insured, individual policies operate under different rules than group policies. Each insurance company and every individual policy has different requirements, exclusions, and benefits.

And, as in the case of Benjamin French -- people with nearly identical health problems may have vastly different experiences with their private health insurance companies depending on their state of residence. Another example of the inequity: If Benjamin's family were poor enough to qualify for Medicaid, most if not all of the cost of his new arm would be covered.

The French's case emerged from the Huffington Post Investigative Fund's citizen journalism project, which is calling on readers to help provide information, data and anecdotes about the inner workings of the insurance industry. One common theme among the responses is the wide variation in state rules.

States hold the primary regulatory authority over health insurance and each has different laws governing which benefits must be offered to its residents. Some of the state rules deal with major health issues and sometimes - as happened with treatment for mental illness - they have prompted insurers to expand coverage nationwide. Some states have adopted mandates for more specialized coverage, including the removal of birthmarks and varicose veins. Arkansas, Georgia and Vermont even require insurers to pay for personal trainers for people who need to lose weight for health reasons.

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When a state lacks a mandate for a specific benefit, that doesn't necessarily mean insurance companies won't cover it anyway. For example, a handful of states do not require insurers to provide coverage for chemotherapy or treatment for Alzheimer's disease - though that coverage is common in many insurance plans. Fourteen states do not require insurers to cover prostate cancer screening, though many plans may offer the benefit anyway.

Prosthetics is one area where the lack of a mandate seems to cause problems for many patients.

Within this decade, 17 states have passed laws requiring that insurers pay for prosthetics on par with federal programs such as Medicaid, but in the other 33 states, insurers do not have to offer coverage for prosthetic devices and also can set annual or lifetime caps on coverage. These caps on prosthetics are similar to the caps on mental health coverage that were recently made illegal by a federal mental-health parity law, scheduled to go into effect in January.

"These rules are illogical and arbitrary," said Kimberly Hoyt, a specialist in Denver, Colo., who designs and fits prosthetic limbs. "You have to be an investigative reporter to figure out which states have parity laws and which states don't." Since Colorado became the first state to pass prosthetic parity legislation in 2001, Hoyt said, she has seen fewer denials overall for prosthetic limbs, but gets frustrated when she sees patients, such as college students, who cannot get coverage because they are insured in states with looser rules.

According to a Web survey conducted by the Amputee Coalition of America, amputees reported a wide variety of caps placed on their personal prosthetic coverage. Some said their insurance would pay no more than $1,000 per year. Some reported lifetime limits as low as $7,000. Many said their insurance would cover the cost of one prosthesis per lifetime, with no coverage for replacements or repairs. By comparison, Benjamin French's lifetime cap of $30,000 seems generous.

But French said her son's new arm will cost more than half of the family's combined income. The couple has four children. Her husband, William French, was laid off from his job at DHL delivery in February. He just started a new job with a salary of about $30,000. Kristen French works part-time at Sam's Club, where she expects to make about $12,000. The family has long had health insurance through their union affiliation.

Having to change her son's prosthetic is like "buying a brand new car every two years," French said.

A spokesman for Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan said the insurance company could not comment on individual cases.

To watch a slideshow about the French family's struggle for health coverage, click the arrows below.

Health care legislation pending in Congress could lead to some increased national consistency in insurance plans, but none of the bills would remove the right of states to require different types of coverage.

Insurance companies generally oppose state mandates, saying such rules complicate policies rather than help consumers. "I'm not going to talk about any one mandate specifically. There are already too many on the books," said Susan Pisano, spokeswoman for the health insurance industry's largest trade group, America's Health Insurance Plans. "Too often the responsibility for this issue is laid at the doorstep of the insurance companies, when it needs to be shared with consumers, employers, and health care providers."

Others say the mandates force insurers to offer more comprehensive coverage. "Insurers try to argue that some of these mandates are absurd, but I think it's telling that there are some states that don't offer, for example, maternity coverage," said Edwin Park, a health insurance analyst at the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, which focuses on programs and policy that affect low and moderate-income families. "It depends on the state, but it can be a crapshoot."

Both the health care reform bills in the House and Senate have provisions that would push the states toward more uniform insurance laws, but health care would still remain patchwork from state-to-state. Both bills would identify at the federal level a minimum amount of essential benefits, but states could legislate stronger mandate laws.

The Senate Finance Committee's health care bill would also enable insurers to put together nationwide plans. These plans would only have to include benefits mandated by a majority of the states. However, states could decline to offer these plans to their residents if they felt they were inadequate.

But some argue that adding a layer of federal regulations will not make the insurance laws seem any less arbitrary.

"These mandates tend to depend on which political constituency is the most organized and vocal. Some people suggest that federal mandates might be more rational than they are from state to state, but I'd argue that you'd find the same problems or worse problems at the federal level," said Joel Ario, Pennsylvania's insurance commissioner and an official at the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.

Ario said that the federal government could play a role in creating minimum standards, but that the states should have the ability to mandate stronger coverage. "We've seen how this has worked in the past with environmental laws, with civil rights laws," he said.


 

The Huffington Post Investigative Fund is assembling a corps of citizens with expertise in health care to help us find and analyze information about claims denials and other insurance data.

Benjamin French was born with his right arm missing below the elbow. In his 12 years, he has been fitted with seven prostheses. His most recent replacement will cost nearly $30,000 and his doctor says...
Benjamin French was born with his right arm missing below the elbow. In his 12 years, he has been fitted with seven prostheses. His most recent replacement will cost nearly $30,000 and his doctor says...
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This family needs to contact Shriners Hospitals. The one in Minneapolis specializes in pediatric orthopaedic cases. All care is free (including prosthetics) regardless of the family's ability to pay or insurance coverage. As a parent of a Shriners patient I can tell you their care is top notch and cannot be beat. http://www.shrinershq.org/About/

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 AM on 11/20/2009

The Shriners, St Jude's Hospital, and all such organizations are righteous dudes, but the fact is, it should never come to this.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 11/20/2009
- SoulKeeper I'm a Fan of SoulKeeper 10 fans permalink
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I couldn't agree more, I am a former patient of the Shriners Hospital in Philadelphia. I spent most of my early childhood there and if not for the remarkable care I received I would've been permanently wheel-chair bound by the time I was 7; according to the docs my parents took me to prior to the ones at Shriners. I am now almost 44 and have spent very little of my life confined to a chair.

The ironic part is now I can't get private health insurance because of my pre-existing condition. Sometimes I wish it wasn't so damned cold in Canada.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 AM on 11/22/2009
- Ivriniel I'm a Fan of Ivriniel 12 fans permalink

Perhaps the family should try contacting the War Amps? http://www.waramps.ca/home.html

The War Amps is an Canadian charity that started out by helping Amputees after the First World War. A long time ago they expanded their program to help kids get prosthetics.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:43 PM on 11/19/2009

Well, according to the logic of republican social darwinist economic philosophy, this child should be given no assistance at all, and if his disability renders him unable to succeed in life, why, he should simply be left to die. After all, if you're poor/disab­led/injure­d/meet with unfortunate circumstances, you are inferior and the magic of the marketplace will weed you out.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:22 PM on 11/19/2009

just looking for the post that says he should have thought about that before being born with justthe one...c'monid do your research, you knew you need two arms in America, you can't get everythng for free...

I cannot repeat enough that you need to really study the exisiting universal healthcare setups in any one of the countries that "claim" it works, Canada for example, and copy the best of all of them...give up this current attempt to appease your thieves and call it reform and do the right thing for everyone.

It hurts my soul to know that good people believe they have the best and are dying or living on the street in order to defend the indefensible (by which I mean for profit medical coverage and care)

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:10 PM on 11/19/2009

I live in Michigan. I have done social work in Michigan. Under Michigan's MiChild program this family would qualify for health insurance for this little boy. Given the family income and the number of dependents there are a variety of helping programs available if they would only apply.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:59 PM on 11/19/2009

I hope this family gets ahold of that information somehow, so they can be helped.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:12 PM on 11/20/2009
- mrsL I'm a Fan of mrsL permalink
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If the government allowed families to purchase insurance from across state lines that would have solved this problem.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:17 PM on 11/19/2009

Yes, this policy is assinine and the State of Michigan, now that it is called to their attention, should fix it. Nevertheless, that discussion is of little comfort to Benjamin's family. I am a believer in government as the arbiter of these policies and the provider of quality services, but too often it falls short. In those cases people must often turn to private organizations to fill the gap. For the French family this is not a public policy gap, it is an unfillable financial black hole. With that thought in mind, I have a suggestion. I encourage them to contact the Shriners in their area. The Shrine hospitals have provided top quality orthopedic care for children for many years, and my understanding is that there is no cost to the parents. The French family should call the Shriners. The rest of us should write our congressional reps.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:35 PM on 11/19/2009
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I'm up in arms over this.
,
,
what?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:51 PM on 11/19/2009

Can someone please point out to me the language in the new healthcare bill that allows for emergency filing for Medicare or Medicaid that would cover just this issue? Or maybe the one you can file when you lose your job? Or can't work?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:23 AM on 11/19/2009
- KIVPossum I'm a Fan of KIVPossum 46 fans permalink
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Sicking to think there is money in our society to pay for a total hip for 90 year old, supply oxygen tanks to lifelong smokers, give motorized carts to the obese, and not find money to help a child lead a normal life.

If he was busting his arms up playing football I might go with the insurance company. But for a simple replacement due to normal gowth?

BTW - does anyone know if prostheses can be recycled - refitted and given to another similar sized person?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:39 AM on 11/19/2009
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Hey -- I'm the reporter on the story. Just to clarify -- prostheses do have to be fitted to individuals. By law, they aren't supposed to be recycled or sold on ebay, though that does happen sometimes. Benjamin French's prosthetic arms have been cobbled together from parts at a limb bank, which is one legal way to lessen the expense.

Also -- Benjamin is not allowed to wear the prosthetic arm during any sporting activities. This is to protect the arm, which is expensive and could get damaged, and to protect other players and Benjamin himself from injuring themselves on the arm.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 11/19/2009

Well...

Then why does the new arm cost $30,000 compared to much less (at least by the facts as presented in the article) for each of the previous seven?

Why does the law disallow refitting/ modding a used one to a new user since they can cobble together "new" ones from parts at a "limb bank"?

What can he do with his one good human arm and his prosthetic that he cannot do with just his one good human arm?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:47 PM on 11/19/2009
- KIVPossum I'm a Fan of KIVPossum 46 fans permalink
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Why can't they be recycled in some way? Seems to me if they were refitted they might be used by another child of the same basic body size. Is it a health issue of some sort, or a matter of prostheses being so unique to the individual that a unit must be specially made?

Since you seem to know, a second question....I can understand the need for frequent replacement as a child grows. But how long do they last for an adult?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:44 PM on 11/19/2009

Is there a "War Amps" group or somewhat similar in the US that assists children who lost limbs to birth defects or accident?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:16 PM on 11/19/2009
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Human society is not in the majority comprised of cold, analytical machines reading balance sheets and dreaming about profit margins. There is no way for people to pay zero taxes, to squeeze every bloody dime they can from their targets, and to simultaneously allow people like Benjamin French to fulfill their dreams. We compromise for good.

Collectively, we must arrive at this crossroad: Profits--or Ethics? Are we barriers to actualizing dreams, or enablers to success?

It's not profitable to help the destitute. It's not profitable to send food aid to ravaged countries. It's not profitable to sustain places frequently bombarded by nature.

But it is right. It is empathetic. And it is American.

Are we cold, unfeeling machines; or are we beating hearts who shed tears over tragedies; idealists who spread joy to every corner of the world; romantics who clear away the scrap and foster the blooms of life, because we know that from the seeds we sow, glory will grow?

Bringing light to darkness isn't written on a ledger; it's tattooed on our souls and it flows in our blood.

Calculating the value of health--our very lives--is venomous, depraved, nefarious, and antithetical to the fabric of the American spirit.

Health care should not be and should never have been a for-profit enterprise.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:57 AM on 11/19/2009

What is ridiculous is that insurance companies can't put a cap in some states.

Having uniformity in plans is a bad thing, not a good thing. In a free market, there should be zillions of different plans to choose from having different levels of cost and coverage.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 AM on 11/19/2009

NO. There should not be zillions of plans. If people cannot predict what their future needs will be, how will they make an informed choice? You don't need good coverage until you need it, and then it is too late. In this case, an insurance company should refuse to insure the boy if it has its first responsibility to its shareholders. It is just idiocy for a society to base medicine on a free market. Shared responsibility (aka socialism) simply is more efficient. We spend much more per capita on medicine and yet we have these horror stories about people with insurance. Never mind the millions without insurance. Market based solutions for medical insurance simple fail. We should follow France, where there are many private doctors and a single payer. The doctors compete and patients choose. But the government assures that everyone can get care.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 AM on 11/22/2009

We already have semi-socialized insurance.

The Government spends over 7% of the GDP to provide care to a small section of the people.. the old and the very poor.... and the Government insurance scheme is bankrupt. It has $35 trillion of unfunded liabilities (assuming that it continues to meet its obligations)

European countries make it work by rationing care. Our Government will either have to do the same or go bankrupt.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 AM on 11/22/2009

It's likely under Government run healthcare he'd have less coverage than he's already gotten.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 PM on 11/18/2009
- mjhst67 I'm a Fan of mjhst67 2 fans permalink

Why is it unlikely? If their annual income met the guidelines of medicaid it would be covered. Why would it not be covered inder a public option? US pays more for healthcare than the following 3 democratic, capitalistic countries that offer a public option. Japan, Germany, and UK.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 PM on 11/19/2009
- lanshark I'm a Fan of lanshark 3 fans permalink

Did you read the article? If his family was poor enough to qualify for Medicaid he would be covered and get his new arm.

What amazes me is that this family can make it with four kids on $42K a year. I make more than that and I'm single (with two dogs). I live comfortably, but certainly not luxuriously, and I'm fortunate enough to live in a relatively low-cost area of the country.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:40 PM on 11/19/2009
- lapdogs I'm a Fan of lapdogs 15 fans permalink
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Yet One More Reason, Of Thousands and Thousands and Thousands, To Establish a Public Option.

Until others who are against the Public Option are hit by a medical disaster and dropped or coverage denies, will they finally understand the value of having their health - along with health insurance that works, when they need it.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 PM on 11/18/2009

I know everyone is saying that it isn't fair that the boy's insurance doesn't cover him anymore but there's nothing Michigan can do. It's just the way the state is run. Some states do cover and some don't. So yeah it may not be fair but that's life and sometimes it isn't fair. Plus I thought it was interesting that some states cover insurace for personal trainers to get them in shape. That's different I've heard of that or even imagined it. Crazy world we live in.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:08 PM on 11/18/2009
- New JohnSawyer I'm a Fan of JohnSawyer 41 fans permalink
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"...it may not be fair but that's life and sometimes it isn't fair."

While anyone would agree that sometimes life isn't fair (actually, it's never fair, but sometimes we get lucky or we develop skills to get us through), we're not talking about random acts of nature, immovable objects, unstoppable forces, or even not taking action to provide help because it might be going against "God's will". We're just talking about the current state of insurance in Michigan, something humans set up, and which humans can change. Why do you think Michigan can't change the way insurance is administered within its borders? I guess your attitude is another reason health insurance reform has been elevated to its proper position, as a national issue rather than leaving it up entirely to the states, since with attitudes like yours, some or many states would continue to lay down before the insurers that you think are unopposable.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 AM on 11/22/2009
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