Lily Pond in New Orleans Botanical Garden - City Park |
Jackson Square |
While miraculous advances have been made in the field of breast reconstruction, they are not available to all women. Even those fortunate enough to have private health insurance experience increasing difficulty obtaining approval for the reconstructive procedures and/or the surgeons they choose. This is especially true if they opt for reconstruction that uses their own tissue rather than implants. “Autologous” reconstruction is more costly for insurance providers and often requires surgical expertise only available “out-of-network.” Insurance companies frequently balk and build barriers to reimbursement, hoping women will tire of the appeals process and go with a quicker, cheaper alternative, even though it may cause her further health issues down the road. Some doctors refuse to work with certain insurance companies or require their fees paid up-front, leaving the hassle of reimbursement to the patients. Yet these women are still the luckier ones.
Although WHCRA is a federal law, it does not require Medicaid or Medicare to cover breast reconstruction after mastectomy. Huh??? These programs were established as an amendment to the Social Security Act in 1965, and even though the federal government matches state dollars to fund them and mandates that some general medical needs be provided, each state has a great deal of latitude. Each administers its own program, establishes its own eligibility standards, and determines the type, amount, duration, and extent of services. And a few states have opted not to provide for reconstruction after breast cancer!!! (Please excuse my past and forthcoming editorial punctuation.)
Sculpture Garden New Orleans Museum of Art - City Park |
According to the American
Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons, the national average
fee for the more advanced types of breast reconstruction is
approximately $9300 per breast (as of 2011). Now let’s pick a
“good” state, which uses exceptionally beautiful policy verbiage,
like New York. How much does its Medicaid provide for reconstruction
after breast cancer? Would you believe $600??? I wonder how many
surgeons, or anyone else, would be willing to provide
their services at a 94% discount.
Fortunately, thankfully,
there are a few surgeons who will take on patients whose
coverage via Medicaid or private insurers is woefully low. Sometimes
these are salaried surgeons working for a clinic or hospital willing
to forgo profits. Or doctors in private practice who do other types
of cosmetic surgery to help counterbalance the losses incurred by
treating uninsured or underinsured breast cancer patients.
Some women have been
helped by benefactors through religious organizations or foundations,
such as Breastoration, which helps cover ancillary expenses of breast
reconstruction surgery. And some women fortuitously find surgeons willing to take them on, purely out of the goodness of their hearts, as do
some surgeons in the New Orleans area. That’s a whole different
level of lucky! But what woman deserves to rely on luck when she’s
going through, perhaps, the worst trial of her life? And what about
the woman who is just plain out of luck?
NOLA’s own Big Al Carson
sings: ...If it wasn’t for bad luck, I wouldn’t have no luck at all…
Sir Paul McCartney sings : With
a Little Luck (This could serve as Breastoration's rallying theme song!)
End note: Linda
McCartney, singing in this video, died in 1998 at age 56, three years
after her diagnosis with breast cancer. One year later, Paul
McCartney and others performed a tribute, “Concert for Linda,”
raising over $2 million for cancer research at Memorial
Sloan-Kettering and Arizona Cancer Center, where she received her
treatment. According to Wikipedia, her husband’s last words to her
were: You’re up on your beautiful Appaloosa
stallion. It’s a fine spring day. We’re riding through the woods.
The bluebells are out, and the sky is clear-blue.
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