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JPZenger

(6,819 posts)
Tue Jan 17, 2012, 06:15 PM Jan 2012

Father of Disabled Child: Everyday I have to argue about coverage (Phil. Inquirer article)

http://www.philly.com/philly/health/20120117_Father_of_disabled_child___Every_month__I_have_to_argue_something_.html?cmpid=131298129

Excerpts:

"Profound brain malformations limit her functions to those of a newborn, and she requires round-the-clock care. During one of his daughter's frequent hospital visits, Brian Linzey was told that Anabelle no longer had health insurance. Terrified - "One day without coverage would be like life or death," he said - he repeatedly called the state welfare office in Delaware County, but no one answered. He said that when his wife went in person, staffers argued with her, insisting that routine paperwork had never been sent in. It was only after the advocacy group Public Citizens for Children and Youth took up the case, presenting a dated fax transmission from Linzey's computer, that a supervisor stepped forward, Linzey said, and conceded that the paperwork had been sitting on a caseworker's desk all along. Coverage was retroactively reinstated after a couple of days in August.

New numbers from the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare show that 88,000 fewer children were receiving Medical Assistance coverage in December than in August. Not counted in that number are at least 23,000 children, who - like Anabelle - had their cases closed and later reopened, often with the help of legal and advocacy organizations.

Although Anabelle's benefits were restored, her father said Medicaid had been increasingly challenging routine orders - shorting the monthly catheter supply, for example - and denying a request for more finger sensors to measure blood-oxygen levels. "For the past three or four months," Linzey said, "every month, I have to argue something.' "
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