reponsible for little girls death?
12/21/2007 7:45:38 PM
okay... i hate the heartless and evil insurance companies as much as the next guy, but here's the key:
12/21/2007 7:54:10 PM
^ Such economizing is only legal in countries with socialized medicine. This is America, and what is good for the AMA is good for America.
12/21/2007 8:10:42 PM
There's always hope, right?But yeah, a very costly medical procedure (in terms of cash and in terms of a fairly rare, available liver) for someone who has been in a "vegetative state for weeks"......tough decision, but probably the right one, given the information in the article.
12/21/2007 8:11:34 PM
I can see a vegetative state for years... but weeks? And these people had insurance. Thats what insurance is for. Who the hell is the insurance company to decide who lives and who dies, especially when these people paid for the coverage?
12/21/2007 8:20:52 PM
And this is what our torts system exists for - breach of contract, gross negligence, wrongful death, etc. And any resulting criminal charges they can convince a DA to pursue.Try that on a state or Federal government and you'll get a sovereign immunity clause thrown at you.Mechanisms exist to punish private actors like this (assuming they work correctly). Try doing that with the government.[Edited on December 21, 2007 at 8:31 PM. Reason : .]
12/21/2007 8:30:57 PM
^^ Usually when two parties interact on such an arangement there will be a contract they both signed outlining the responsibilities of the two parties in various circumstances. More accurately, you could just go read the law passed by the state legislature. There is very little room for insurance companies to maneuver in efforts to cut costs, as I understand it.[Edited on December 21, 2007 at 8:33 PM. Reason : ^]
12/21/2007 8:32:35 PM
Well, the fact that they reversed the decision showed that approving it was well within their discretionary means.
12/21/2007 8:47:32 PM
That, or their prior decision was an administrative or other kind of error. I mean, before we assume malice here, there are still the possibilities of human fallacy and simple stupidity to be considered.
12/21/2007 8:50:20 PM
12/21/2007 8:56:05 PM
^ What the fuck?Who is all too eager? Save your "oh dear god the liberals are going to drag us into socialistic hell" talk for when Scuba Steve officially brings it into the thread.
12/21/2007 9:19:17 PM
Survival of the Fittest.
12/21/2007 9:42:15 PM
Scuba Steve, you do realize that HMO's are PROFIT CAPPED by the states? The whole "omg they just care about increasing profits" line is bullshit.
12/22/2007 4:00:48 AM
12/22/2007 7:57:34 AM
12/22/2007 9:21:29 AM
^^ I disagree. While I have not read their contract, I would hope that my health insurer is at least trying to keep my premiums down. If a transplant for a girl that is probably brain-dead anyway is going to drive up all our premiums by $1 a year then I would hope they do not do it. Some sacrifices for the general good of policy holders are desirable, and I do realize that I am risking my life in the name of saving my own money through this principle. But fire-fighters do this every-day, why shouldn't the insurance company be able to offer us protection with limits since it is cheaper and let us decide?[Edited on December 22, 2007 at 9:30 AM. Reason : ^]
12/22/2007 9:30:34 AM
^^OK OK....both good points. The terms of the contract are very important. No telling what they were in this case. It just seems like if they were paying for health care coverage, they should get it, contractually speaking.^I hear what you are saying, and I agree with you ...but its just like...well...like you said... I want my premiums down too, but God forbid the day comes when like, my wife or my daughter needs something like, I would hope they would help me....I dont know...its a rough situation...I guess I would want to know what the terms of the contract were...
12/22/2007 9:49:24 AM
The important thing here is that medical decisions should be left to medical professionals, not suits.With multiple doctors agreeing that a liver transplant was a good idea, that should have been enough to authorize treatment. Ultimately the coming lawsuit is going to cost Cigna a hell of a lot more than the treatment would have.
12/22/2007 10:47:57 AM
The only decision the suits made was that the particular procedure in question, for this particular case was not covered by the specific insurance policy in question. The actual decision to go ahead with the transplant was still in the hands of the parent and the doctors.Also, there was nothing which prevents the parents from paying out of pocket and then suing the insurance company for reimbursement if they honestly believed it should have been covered by their policy.In the end, the decision not to go ahead with the procedure, and the decision to take the girl off life support was entirely in the hands of the parents and the doctors.It's a crappy situation I agree, and I hope that I would never be in such a position to decide whether I would put myself into extreme debt or let a family member die, but in the end, that was the decision to be made, and the family made a monetary decision just like the insurance company did.
12/22/2007 11:17:40 AM
I thought the lawyer's name sounded familiar: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_GeragosThis article has more information than the OP:
12/22/2007 11:27:20 AM
This is the sort of shit that inclines me to believe that we should transfer over to a socialized health care system like they have over in Europe. Because privatized insurance companies make a profit off of you not receiving coverage, they have an incentive to find any reason to deny you. That's not necessarily a fault of the free market, we're in the mess that we're in because insurance companies have built a suffocating monopoly. That's also not to say that socialized health care would somehow be perfect, but under that system there'd be no reason to deny anybody a life-saving operation (in theory, anyway, not sure how it'd pan out in practice).
12/22/2007 11:51:30 AM
12/22/2007 11:53:05 AM
50%? You wouldnt give somebody an operation when the odds are 50%! Jesus man, those are pretty good odds. I mean, its a human freaking life we're talking about. If we don't have life, we don't have anything.
12/22/2007 12:01:23 PM
12/22/2007 12:52:41 PM
12/22/2007 3:05:35 PM
12/22/2007 3:24:21 PM
12/22/2007 7:04:26 PM
12/22/2007 9:45:02 PM
An aaronburro post I kind of agree with!What's the world a-comin' to?
12/22/2007 10:01:53 PM
^^ completely agree
12/26/2007 3:08:13 PM
12/26/2007 4:30:21 PM
^ so what, a company can't decide to act in your favor despite their contract with you? The family asked for an exception to the policy, the company granted it. It isn't CIGNAs fault that the family made the decision to take their daughter off life support before they heard back. It isn't their fault that the family made the (economic) decision to not go ahead with the surgery and deal with the insurance later or that the doctors made the (economic) decision to not do the surgery on their own dime. In fact, dare I say the only people in this whole procces who made the right decisions were cigna? Their first decision was made based on their legal contract and obligation to the family, and then when asked to reconsider their decision was made on the extenuating circumstances.
12/26/2007 5:52:03 PM
12/27/2007 1:27:08 AM
Healthcare actually should be provided by the state and you'd be actively engaging in doublethink if you believe otherwise.Honestly, a for-profit company in charge of my medical treatment? I wonder which way they'll tend to vote when it comes down to 'cheap' or 'healthy.'I also find it a bit ironic that some of the nation's poorest people argue against government provided health care.
12/27/2007 1:31:51 AM
Healthcare is one of those very few issues where wasteful, excessive spending is preferable to lowballing.[Edited on December 27, 2007 at 1:34 AM. Reason : alive and poor > dead and marginally less poor]
12/27/2007 1:34:16 AM
^ You're looking to incur the wrath of LoneSnark there.
12/27/2007 1:42:54 AM
I frequently find myself drifting off to sleep with many worries on my mind. That I might have incurred the wrath of libertarians is not among them.
12/27/2007 1:51:36 AM
Being threatened by a Libertarian is akin to being told you're going to hell by Gene Simmons.
12/27/2007 1:53:31 AM
12/27/2007 9:59:24 AM
12/27/2007 11:41:54 AM
12/27/2007 12:03:40 PM
Quote :"Health care should be provided by the individual, health INSURANCE should be provided by whomever the individual wants to contract with."I can't speak for 1337 b4k4, but I believe he's referring to something along the lines of the individual being responsible for 'preventative maintenance' type health care (check ups, treatment of minor injuries, coughs, colds, etc) and insurance being responsible for catastrophic health care (massive bodily harm, diseases, transplants, etc). That is, health insurance should be more akin to car insurance--the individual is responsible for general upkeep and minor repairs, while insurance is used for exclusively for high-dollar repairs.Quote :"efficiently run government, as much of an oxymoron as that seems, would provide better health care then private company whose operating motive is profit."Why does "efficiently run government" seem like an oxymoron? Perhaps because the government is not and has never been efficient? Sure, I'd agree that an efficient government would be wonderful, but an efficient government isn't something that's going to happen. Ever.[Edited on December 27, 2007 at 12:08 PM. Reason : I type too slow]
12/27/2007 12:07:38 PM
12/27/2007 12:15:22 PM
You know what dudes, I give up. Continue to think 250$ checkups and 700$ Xray's aren't absurd.
12/27/2007 12:54:34 PM
^^^ yep^ They are absurd, and do you know why they're absurd? Because everyone has fucking insurance to cover all the little things. Do you really think your doctor could survive charging $250 for checkups if everyone had to pay out of pocket for them? Hell no. But he charges high so that when the insurance company pays out 30-50% of what he charges, he still gets his high paycheck. Even worse, if god forbid he lowered his prices, the insurance companies would lower what they paid since lower prices brings down the UCR for his services.And the prices sure as hell won't go down when it's the government footing the bill. Call a suplier up, any supplier and tell them you're interested in a bulk purchase of something and ask about pricing. Then call up and say you're asking about a bulk purchase for the government. You'll pay more the second time. The government always pays more in the long run, because in the end, there's more paperwork, red tape and processes and procedures for the government.
12/27/2007 1:02:58 PM
...LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOLI'm glad you have such a solid grasp on the overhead most Doctor's have.
12/27/2007 1:08:35 PM
Well, then. Explain the overhead doctors have.Then explain how the current health care system (government/private) distorts those prices.Then explain how a 100% government run health care system would fix our health care problems.Then explain how a 100% private health care system would fail to fix our health care problems.
12/27/2007 1:28:30 PM
12/27/2007 1:32:42 PM
For what it's worth, I don't begrudge doctors their large paychecks. They charge what the people (or in thise case, the insurance companies and the government) will pay, and they certainly have large expenses to pay, but it's extremely ignorant to think the the current way the insurance industry pays for everything doesn't inflate the prices that are paid.
12/27/2007 1:48:49 PM
12/27/2007 2:40:28 PM