Insurers Limit Coverage for Prosthetic Limbs

When Michael Adams was researching health insurance options in 2023, he had one very specific requirement: coverage for prosthetic limbs.

*Adams, 51, lost his right leg to cancer 40 years ago, and he has worn out more legs than he can count. He picked a gold plan on the Colorado health insurance marketplace that covered prosthetics, including microprocessor-controlled knees like the one he has used for many years. That function adds stability and helps prevent falls.

*But when his leg needed replacing last January after about five years of everyday use, his new marketplace health plan wouldn’t authorize it. The roughly $50,000 leg with the electronically controlled knee wasn’t medically necessary, the insurer said, even though Colorado law leaves that determination up to the patient’s doctor, and his has prescribed a version of that leg for many years, starting when he had employer-sponsored coverage.

AHIP, a trade group for health plans, said health plans generally provide coverage when the prosthetic is determined to be medically necessary, such as to replace a body part or function for walking and day-to-day activity. In practice, though, prosthetic coverage by private health plans varies tremendously, said Ashlie White, chief strategy and programs officer at the Amputee Coalition. Even though coverage for basic prostheses may be included in a plan, “often insurance companies will put caps on the devices and restrictions on the types of devices approved,” White said.

The Medicare program’s 80% coverage of prosthetic limbs mirrors its coverage for other services. Still, an October report by the Government Accountability Office found that only 30% of beneficiaries who lost a limb in 2016 received a prosthesis in the following three years.

Cost is a factor for many people.

Come on folks. A wooden peg leg is perfectly adequate.

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Especially when it replaces whatever was above the neck…

Having lost his leg to cancer, it becomes a pre existing condition, not a risk but a certainty. Insurance does not cover certainty.

The Captain

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That’s the whole reason Obamacare came about. Every insurance executive in the country would be forced to hide his family in a bunker if we brought back “pre-existing conditions.” Something like half the US population has a “pre-existing condition” of one type or another that would deny them health insurance under an unlimited price gouging, for-profit health insurance model.

intercst

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Since it’s not an insurable condition it makes sense that other means, public means, might be the way to deal with it. But bringing insurance in as an intermediary is a recipe for disaster, fighting fire with gasoline.

The Captain

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Exactly! But letting for-profit health insurers launder the money earmarked for healthcare is a wonderful, low-risk business for the insurers and the politicians they’ve bought & paid for.

intercst

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Getting ram-rodded by health insurance companies is the mother of invention.

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