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Consumers, Nurses, Seniors tell Governor:
Don't break your promise to protect innocent
patients from Health Insurance
cancellations, don't weaken existing law
SACRAMENTO, Calif., Aug. 7
/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Nurses,
consumers, and seniors called on the
legislature and the governor today to
include a key provision to protect innocent
patients in any health insurance
cancellation legislation forthcoming in the
closing days of the legislative session.
Over the last 5 years,
California patients have been plagued by the
practice of insurance companies
retroactively canceling health insurance
coverage after they get sick - so called
"rescissions" - leaving patients without
health care when they are sick and need it
most.
Cancelled patients are
virtually uninsurable and often hundreds of
thousands of dollars in debt while facing
ongoing medical treatment.
"RNs see the damage done to
patients every day by insurance companies,"
said Malinda Markowitz, RN and member of the
council of presidents of the California
Nurses Association. "Insurance companies
should not be allowed to cancel the health
care of innocent patients and the
legislature should not allow the Governor to
water down existing law to benefit his
largest contributors."
In 2007, Governor
Schwarzenegger's Administration promised to
protect innocent patients from rescission in
new regulations. Those regulations have
stalled. Now, the governor's office has
drafted legislative language that retreats
from that promise and that would weaken
existing law.
The governor's bill would
repeal the ban on "post-claims underwriting"
in Health & Safety Code Section 1389.3 which
bars health insurers from rescinding or
limiting a policy in anyway after a patient
gets sick unless the insurer can show that
the patient "willfully misrepresented" a
material health fact on their enrollment
application.
Download the governor's bill
here:
http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/resources/Gov.pdf
Given the extreme hardship
placed on patients whose coverage has been
retroactively cancelled, the groups said it
is critical that any legislation approved by
the legislature and signed by the governor
includes a clear and unambiguous requirement
that only patients that "willfully
misrepresented" their health history on
their enrollment application can be
rescinded.
"Too many Californians
discover that the insurance they counted on
isn't there at the very time they need it.
We need strong legislation to make insurers
honor the policies they issue and to protect
patients unless they willfully misled their
insurance company," said Gary Passmore,
Director of the Congress of California
Seniors.
Currently insurers cancel
coverage when patients get sick citing
so-called "omissions" on a patient's
enrollment application - induced by the
intentionally vague and misleading questions
on the applications - regardless of whether
patients intentionally misrepresented their
medical histories as the law requires.
"Insurance should be
something that you can count on," said Don
Ernst, President of Consumer Attorneys of
California. "Health insurance companies are
failing to live up to their promises: broken
promises equals broken people."
On numerous occasions
Governor Schwarzenegger has promised to
protect innocent patients from rescission of
health insurance policies:
-- "[It is] outrageous that
innocent patients have to live in fear of
losing their health care coverage. I look
forward to working with my partners in the
Legislature to ensure this egregious
practice is stopped." Dorsey Griffith,
Sacramento Bee, "Patients gain a victory;
Insurance reinstated for some; thousands
more get reviews," April 18, 2008.
-- "As I've said before,
patients should not live in fear of unfairly
losing their healthcare coverage when they
need it most - and I look forward to working
with the Legislature to ensure this
egregious practice is put to an end." Lisa
Girion, Los Angeles Times, "State fines 2
health plans over canceled coverage; Anthem
Blue Cross & Blue Shield agree to offer new
policies," July 18, 2008.
-- "Until we achieve
comprehensive healthcare reform, stopping
unfair healthcare rescissions is an urgently
needed consumer protection. This terrible
practice further illustrates the erosion of
our healthcare system and the need for
comprehensive healthcare reform. Today we
are standing up for consumers by putting an
end to a deplorable practice, and I will
continue working with my partners in the
Legislature to stop unfair healthcare
rescissions once and for all." Lisa Girion,
Los Angeles Times, "Bonuses for cutting
coverage is banned," July 23, 2008.
In his State of the State
address this January, Schwarzenegger
recounted the story of a San Diego man whose
insurer rescinded his coverage after he was
diagnosed with lymphoma. In his speech,
Governor Schwarzenegger said:
The insurance company then
went back through all his records looking
for a reason to cut him off. They pointed to
a minor knee problem unrelated to the
cancer. They noted that he now weighed less
than he did when he applied for the
insurance.
Well, of course, he did. He
was now sick with cancer. But they cut him
off.
One month after he got sick,
the company cancelled his insurance. Todd
died eight months later.
We are taking action so that
what happened to Todd will not happen to any
other Californian.
Under the Governor's
legislation, Todd would not have been
protected because an insurer would be
allowed to cancel coverage even though
Todd's weight loss was due to illness, not a
"willful misrepresentation."
"Insurance companies have an
unsavory track record of canceling people's
health coverage for illegitimate reasons
just when it's needed," said Elizabeth
Sholes, Director of Public Policy,
California Church IMPACT. "Obviously we all
have a personal responsibility to be
truthful about the state of our health. But
corporations have an equal responsibility to
honor our mutual contracts. That is simple
fairness. For the Governor to betray us by
giving the corporation more leeway to
wantonly cut people from support when they
get sick shows where his moral values lie.
And they are not with the people of
California.
In December 2006, Consumer
Watchdog petitioned the Schwarzenegger
Administration's Department of Managed
Health Care (DMHC) for new regulations to
clarify existing law regarding rescission.
Though draft regulations issued by the
Department in 2007 clearly require insurers
to show a patient willfully misrepresented a
material health fact on an insurance
application before a rescission can be
carried out, those regulations have stalled.
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