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Thread: Paralyzed former prep athlete sees health coverage run out

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  1. #1
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    Paralyzed former prep athlete sees health coverage run out

    This makes me just see red. He can no longer afford to have helpers take him to his former school to give pep talks or volunteer as a coach. Somehow, I don't see either of those as medically necessary. Did he really need nurses in his home round the clock the entire time? Does he think someone is just going to pop up and give him another $5 million? Where was the insurance company in all of this, making sure that $5 million went as far as it possibly could? Guess what, Mr. Clark... not everyone who has a spinal cord injury gets this golden ticket.


    Paralyzed former prep athlete sees premium health coverage run out
    After nearly a decade, $5 million insurance policy has come to an end

    March 01, 2011 | By Lolly Bowean, Tribune reporter

    In the days after a football injury left Eisenhower High School running back Rasul "Rocky" Clark paralyzed from the neck down, he was showered with attention from medical professionals and assured by school officials that he would be well taken care of, he said.

    For nearly a decade Clark enjoyed superb medical care — nurses in his home around the clock, access to pain medicines and prescriptions and a storeroom of supplies.

    Now the $5 million insurance policy that once covered Clark's medical care has reached its lifetime maximum and come to an end — and along with it, many of the benefits he once enjoyed. Those benefits may have kept him healthy enough to surpass the life expectancy for most quadriplegics, his mother and primary physician said.

    "I was told I'd be taken care of all of my life," Clark, 27, said from his bed in his modest house in south suburban Robbins. "That was one thing that brought me comfort. I knew I'd be OK. Now it seems like I'm being penalized for living too long. That's how I see it."

    Clark is covered by Medicaid and has some state support, but he no longer can afford the gold-star coverage he has had for the last decade.

    Clark's case touches on a larger conversation the nation is having about capping health care costs and rationing care, the push and pull between everyone wanting a top-of-the-line policy but not wanting to pay sky-high premiums. Insurance experts say lifetime maximums keep costs down for consumers, and there are policies available with no coverage limit, but those come at a price.

    Although it wouldn't affect Clark, under the health reform legislation, lifetime limits are banned for health insurance plans. Because the regulation became effective on Sept. 23, 2010, after Clark's policy expired, it would not benefit him. Still the goal was to make sure that seriously ill consumers didn't find themselves running through coverage with no other options.

    For Clark and his family, it's hard to see beyond the specifics of their situation.

    Clark can no longer afford to have helpers take him to his former school to give pep talks or volunteer as a coach. Although he'd like to enroll in college art classes, he cannot pay for it now. So Clark stays in bed most of the time.

    His mother, who quit her job at a nursing home several years ago, gets a salary from a state program to care for her son. Clark's father visits, and his two sisters help out when they can, but his mother is doing the work three nurses used to do.
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  2. #2
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    He probably does need 'round the clock attendants, but without knowing the extent of his paralysis, it is hard to know whether he really needed nurses the whole time. It is sad, you would think someone should have been in charge on managing his care the most cost-effective way possible.

    I hope they find some way to get him coverage again.
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  3. #3
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    When I worked at Blue Cross a lot of our members had $1 million lifetime maximums on their policies. I used to say to patients and family members that part of my job as your case manager is to stretch that amount as far as it will possibly go, and at the same time, to make sure you have access to all the care and services you need.
    Praying for peace in the Middle East, Ukraine, and around the world.

    I've been Boo'd ... right off the stage!

    Aaahh, I have been defrosted! Thank you, Bonny and Asiel!
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    "That's the power of kittens (and puppies too, of course): They can reduce us to quivering masses of Jell-O in about two seconds flat and make us like it. Good thing they don't have opposable thumbs or they'd surely have taken over the world by now." -- Paul Lukas

    "We consume our tomorrows fretting about our yesterdays." -- Persius, first century Roman poet

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  4. #4
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    Paralyzed from the neck down -- yes, I'd think he always needs SOMEONE in the home w/ him. Like Karen said, not clear it had to be nurses.

    Most likely, insurance covered having someone with him someone w/ him wherever he goes, whether that was to school for pep talks, or to a hospital for tests / treatment, or vocational training. I think (hard to tell from the short newspaper blurb) this provision is designed to help keep the person in some sort of life. But --he chose how to use it. And didn't he / his family or ANYONE notice when he went through 50%? 80%? This shouldn't be coming as a surprise to him, that he hit the life time max.
    .

  5. #5
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    The article doesn’t say if he is a spared quad – or if he is ventilator dependent. Both of these can affect the cost of care.

    Assuming the worst, that he is on a vent, then he cannot be left alone. If something disconnected, he would die within minutes.

    Assuming the best, that he is a spared quad, he would be able to participate in his care, and would not need around-the-clock caregivers.

    5 million dollars over 10 years comes out to $500,000 per year – or $1370 per day – averaged out. Now a big chunk was spent in the months right after the accident. Then there is the specialized equipment – wheelchairs, vans, beds. And don’t forget he would need to be turned every 2-3 hours to prevent bedsores.

    Here is an article about a young man in Oregon. Different situations, but similar problems.

    30 years ago a young man in our town went swimming right before high school graduation. He dove into the water, hit a rock, and was instantly a ventilator dependent quad – at the age of 18. He lived the life for about a year – repeated urinary infections, pneumonia, etc. Then he made the decision to be taken off the vent – and he died. His choice.

    It always comes down to the money, doesn’t it. Would it be kinder to do nothing at the time of injury and just let them go . . . . . . and who would want to make that decision?

  6. #6
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    Photo Gallery: http://www.latimes.com/health/chi-11...7.photogallery

    The 3rd and 4th vertebrae in his neck were broken in 2000. He is not ventilator-dependent; he operates his computer by mouth (in photos).

    Shaving, cleaning, feeding, evacuating bowels, turning to prevent bedsores, treating bedsores...just trying to think of all that had to be done for my sister, even though she was not on a ventilator.

    It's really tragic that the ban on lifetime coverage caps came into effect after his policy expired. I hope something can be done.
    "Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda

  7. #7
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    Thank you, Candace.

    He's not on a vent - and he is not a spared quad. One can easily see the muscle wasting of his arms and legs. He can do nothing for himself - except breathe and blow for computer use.

    If his nose itches, he cannot scratch it; he cannot blow his nose; nor wipe a tear from his eye.

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