Imagine many years ago
you suffered mild depression when you broke up with your significant
other and you briefly sought mental health help. Now you're happy and
healthy, but you get a rude awakening when you try to buy individual health insurance: One by one your applications for individual health insurance are denied based on the six counseling sessions you had a decade ago, which are permanently recorded in your medical history.
You've
all but forgotten about your ex, so how can this seemingly
insignificant episode be coming back to haunt you? Are you really on
your way to becoming uninsured?
You could be if you're
trying to obtain individual health insurance, according to Karen
Pollitz, a Georgetown University researcher who co-authored a study on
the individual health insurance market for the Kaiser Family Foundation
(KFF) with Richard Sorian and Kathy Thomas. Individual insurers might
deny you coverage based on your medical history if it includes:
- Use
of prescription drugs to treat anxiety, depression, or a physical
condition, including Ativan, Klonipin, Paxil, Prozac, Serzone, Zoloft,
Xanax, and Wellbutrin.
- Counseling for anxiety,
depression, grief, or an eating or sleep disorder. Even if you briefly
sought counseling as a way to cope with the September 11th terrorist
attacks, you could be denied individual health insurance, according to
researchers with Georgetown's Health Privacy Project.
"People
who've always had group health insurance are completely unprepared when
they're forced to seek coverage in this [individual health insurance]
market," says Pollitz. "They think they're going to get the same
coverage they had in their jobs, except they'll just have to pay a
little more money. It's absolutely not like that at all. The individual
health insurance market is unpredictable, inconsistent, and expensive."
Dr.
Deborah Peel has seen the unpredictability of the individual health
insurance market up close. Peel, a former-president of the National
Coalition of Mental Health Professionals and Consumers, recalls a young
graduate student whose sleep apnea was treated with antidepressant
medication. When he was dropped from his parents' group health
insurance plan due to his age, he began applying for a policy in the
individual market. He was turned down several times because his medical
records showed he had taken an antidepressant — even though the
medication was for a physical rather than mental condition.
Peel
says all doctors should give their patients a "Miranda-like warning"
that anything they say or treatment they receive might be shared with a
third-party payer (such as an insurer). "Ethically, doctors and all
mental health professionals are responsible to disclose anything that
might possibly harm their patients, including the fact that information
they share with you might possibly be cause for an insurance denial
later on."
A
number of everyday circumstances can force someone to seek individual
health insurance coverage. They include: losing status as a
dependent on a parent's health plan; getting a job that doesn't offer
group health insurance benefits; becoming self-employed; retiring
before age 65; and coming to the end of your health insurance benefits
under COBRA, the federal health insurance safety net for families in
the midst of crisis, such as unemployment, divorce or death.
One
of the biggest shocks you might encounter when moving from a group
health insurance policy to an individual policy is the individual
health insurer will consider more than just your age and personal
medical history when deciding whether to offer you a policy.
In
their study "How Accessible is Individual Health Insurance for
Consumers in Less-than-Perfect Health?" Pollitz and her co-authors say
90 percent of the time, the less-healthy health insurance applicants in
their study were unable to buy policies from individual insurers at
standard rates, and 37 percent were rejected. Of the 63 percent who
were accepted, most had benefit restrictions placed on them (28
percent), or premium surcharges (13 percent), or both (12 percent).
KFF
warns even if you're in perfect health, you might still face barriers
to getting a policy, based on your age. KFF’s study found premiums for
a healthy 62-year-old man were three to six times higher than for a
healthy 24-year-old woman.
Another shock you might
encounter when buying an individual health policy is health insurance
is often not subject to any kind of rate regulation. Only five states
(Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, and Vermont) guarantee you
access to the individual market at community-rated premiums that are
not based on your health status. These states also limit coverage
exclusions that insurers can impose because of pre-existing conditions.
Very
few consumers who seek individual health insurance have protection
through federal law. The Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA) requires insurers to sell a health insurance
policy without coverage limits to you if you have had at least 18
months of continuous coverage and are moving from one group health
insurance policy to another group policy. HIPAA does not limit what
health insurers can charge for such coverage.
Why are
individual health insurers so picky about whom they choose to insure?
According to Thomas, the statistics tell the story: "The sickest 1
percent of your policyholders can comprise between 40 to 50 percent of
all your claims. That's what makes health insurance such a risky
business."
While life insurers
only have to pay out a death claim once, health insurers may have to
pay out numerous claims over many years for one sick person. Individual
insurers can't spread out that risk among groups of many people the way
group health insurers or self-insured employers do.
Approximately
18.8 million adult Americans suffer from some form of depression in any
given year, according to the National Institute of Mental Health.
Statistics show one in five of us will experience a major episode of
depression during our lives. Mental health professionals and privacy
advocates say people who need mental health help should not go
untreated for fear that they might be denied health insurance in the
future. Even so, there is evidence some people are already putting off
treatment for fear of being penalized.
According to the
California Health Care Council's "Medical Privacy and Confidentiality"
survey, 15 percent of American adults say they have done something "out
of the ordinary" to keep their personal medical information
confidential. The steps they have taken to protect their medical
privacy include:
- Paying out-of-pocket when they already have health insurance in order to avoid disclosure.
- Not seeking care to avoid disclosure to an employer.
- Giving inaccurate or incomplete information on a medical history form.
- Asking a doctor to not write down a health problem or to record a less serious or embarrassing condition.
Child
psychiatrist Dr. Barry Herman says many of his patients' parents, who
he says tend to be well-educated and financially stable, understand the
possible ramifications of having their child's treatment disclosed to a
third party. "It's not at all unusual for them to pay cash or ask for
free samples of medication [instead of a prescription]," says Herman.
"They don't want a paper trail."
What about the paper trail
you create when you complete an application for individual health
insurance? A standard application will ask you more than 20 specific
questions about your medical history, going back 10 or more years. Not
only are you asked to disclose whether you have ever had any "symptoms
of, diagnosis of, or treatment or medication for" such obvious health
problems as cancer, diabetes, high blood pressure, and HIV, but you
must also inform the insurer about any allergies, anxiety, benign
cysts, breast augmentation, depression, earaches or sexually
transmitted diseases.
"It's not at all unusual for them to pay cash or ask for free samples of medication. They don't want a paper trail." |
While
you might be tempted to lie, this is never a good idea. Lying on your
health insurance application is fraud. If you are caught, the health
insurer can cancel your policy. If you don't think you can be easily
caught, think again. Select individual and small group health insurers
now have access to medical information on more than 16 million people
contained in files warehoused by the Medical Information Bureau (MIB).
The MIB provides medical information that insurers use to compare notes on applicants.
What
if it's already too late for you to pay cash for your antidepressants
or counseling sessions. Can you still get individual health insurance?
It's possible, say the KFF study’s authors, but it will probably take a
great deal of persistence and there are no
guarantees. Even if you are offered a policy, it will inevitably be
more expensive than group health insurance and it will no doubt limit
or even exclude certain coverages.
The best you can do is
to fill out any applications for individual health insurance to the
best of your ability and be truthful. An experienced health insurance
broker who knows the underwriting criteria of several individual
insurers might increase your chances of acceptance.
If
you're denied, ask your doctor to write a letter supporting your
re-application, particularly if you are no longer taking medication or
receiving mental health treatment. "When we did the study, we found
that there aren't any hard and fast underwriting rules," says Pollitz.
"There's a great deal of variability from insurer to insurer."
Additionally,
once you are denied, you will have to answer "Yes" to the question that
asks you to disclose whether you — or anyone to be covered under your
policy — has ever had an application for life, disability, or health
insurance "declined, postponed, rated up, modified, or terminated."
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