In Indiana, a school superintendent
is facing three
felony charges after using her son's insurance in January to help a
sick student access a doctor and prescription antibiotics. Dr. Casey
Smitherman, who on February 1 resigned from Elwood Community School
Corporation, has helped the 15-year-old student before, according
to reports: She purchased his clothes, and even helped clean
his house. This time, she had noticed his absence from school and
took it upon herself to bring him to a medical center. In an
apologetic public
statement, the superintendent explained that she was aware that
the student didn't have insurance and so, out of concern for his
well-being, wanted to do all she could “to help him get well.”
Court documents reveal the total insurance claim was $233.
Nearly one year ago, Dr. Smitherman
was a celebrated presence in Elwood. In June of last year, she
received a
glowing profile in Indiana's Herald
Bulletin and
enthusiastic approbation from James Snapp, Superintendent of the
Brownsburg Community School Corporation. “I think in a time when
our students were facing greater challenges with poverty increasing,
Casey really connected with families, whether that was connecting
them with the food pantry or the clothing pantry,” Snapp explained
to The Herald
Bulletin. Smitherman's
attitude was made explicit in this profile: “Kids can’t learn if
they’re hungry and are scared to go home,” she told The Herald
Bulletin. The number of
children living in poverty in the state of Indiana is a
staggering 301,000.
In Smitherman's district alone, at
least 78 percent of students qualify for free or
reduced-cost lunches. The poverty rate in Elwood: 24.2
percent.
Indiana prosecutor Rodney
Cummings has
argued that while Smitherman's actions shouldn't jeopardize
her career, “there have to be some consequences.” It apparently
isn't enough to watch Americans fall into incapacitating debt in
order to access life-saving medical care: Those who provide succour
in times of hardship must be held to even greater account. The
impulse to discipline acts of solidarity is especially cruel in a
system that leaves the poor to fend for themselves. Smitherman's case
further emphasizes the intensity of the healthcare industry's
aggravation of class inequality, the result of which leaves
impoverished communities at the mercy of exploitative pop-up
emergency clinics and volunteer-based roadside medical
services that compel families
to camp out in their vehicles sometimes two days in advance
for a chance at care.
The recent death of attorney and
disability rights activist Carrie
Ann Lucas demonstrates the cruelty of private healthcare
corporations, which act as the veritable death
panels the poor were told to fear if the private health
insurance market were meaningfully challenged. Forty-seven-year-old
Lucas, a legal assistant for the Colorado Cross-Disability Coalition,
was forced to ration insulin, the price of which has been rising
steadily. UnitedHealthcare, the private insurer tasked with
facilitating the medical treatments Lucas needed to live, denied
her access to a specific inhaled antibiotic in order to save
themselves $2,000. The company raked in a total revenue of $56.5
billion in 2018. Her death came “after an arbitrary denial
from an insurance company caused a plethora of health problems,
exacerbating her disabilities and eventually leading to her premature
death,” Lucas’ obituary reads.
The death of Lucas is not the
first, nor will it be the last, of its kind. In 2015, a crowdfunding
campaign was published on behalf of an Oklahoma mother,
Oranna Cunningham, diagnosed with stage 4 nasopharyngeal cancer. In
2014, her insurer Aetna not only denied her CAT scans, but denied
funding for Proton beam therapy, which would have cost $92,000 and
possibly saved her life. Aetna’s 2015
financial data reveals that in 2014 the company's total
revenue was roughly $58 billion. Aetna's CEO at the time was Mark
Bertolini, who has overseen the insurance giant since 2010, is “the
richest person in Hartford,” according
to Forbes, with
a fortune of $180 million.
The description of the fundraiser
for Cunningham reveals the full barbarity of insurance companies like
Aetna, and the pain of the families who are forced to beg for
somebody—anybody—to
help them. The family was only able to raise $17,810, and in May 2015
Oranna died at the age of 54. In November 2018, an Oklahoma
jury awarded the
family $25.5 million, one juror saying that Oranna Cunningham was
“failed at every turn,” and another juror declaring that “Aetna
needed to pay.”
Victims of predatory insurance
companies are hanging on by the thinnest of ropes, oftentimes working
themselves to the bone even when their bodies cannot handle it. Take,
for example, legendary guitarist Dick Dale, who passed
away on March 16 at the age of 81. He was left touring
in his final years in order to stay
alive. “I can’t stop touring because I will die. Physically
and literally, I will die,” he said in 2015. Despite his medical
needs, and the fact that he was “double insured,” insurance
companies were refusing to pay for necessary supplies Dale required
to avoid stoma infections that resulted in excruciating pain and
humiliating colostomy bag ruptures, in one case while he was on tour,
just before he was about to take the stage. “My fecal matter went
down my legs, up my pants, my beautiful cowboy
shirt—everything,” Dale revealed to Billboard. “We
didn’t have a backup pair of pants, because it was a one-off. [My
wife] took everything off and washed my jeans, my stockings, my
shoes, my shirt, every part of me. Then we wrung them out wet, and I
did the concert with wet pants and shirts. After that, I sat at the
merch table, and signed for five and a half hours, me still in my wet
clothes.”
A report from Dallas
Morning News tells
the story of Heather Powell who, after being shot and left paralyzed,
needed in-home aids to wash her body and cook her food. In 2017,
Powell's insurer Superior HealthPlan decided to cut the hours she'd
be under the care of an aid from 12 hours to 7, declaring the
services “not medically necessary.” The Dallas
Morning News report
discloses, “Alone for 17 hours a day. Unable to move. In pain.
Powell began to plan her suicide.”
This is no fault in the system: The
industry is an architecture of misery, extracting profits from
suffering. According to a reportpublished
in 2017 by The Doctor-Patient Rights Project, insurance companies
“denied treatment coverage to one-in-four (24 percent) patients
with a chronic or persistent illness or condition; 41 percent of
the patients denied coverage were denied once, while 59 percent were
denied multiple times.” Thirty-four percent of patients who had
been denied coverage were forced to put off treatment, despite having
a chronic illness. An astounding 70 percent of treatments for a
chronic illness denied by insurers were for conditions referred to as
“serious.” The grim reaper disguises himself in many forms, in
this case that of an insurance agent.
The case of Dr. Casey Smitherman
unveils the boundless ruthlessness of the healthcare system, one
which punishes the sick, denying them the care that they are
rightfully deserving of. “I'm not justifying what I did,”
Smitherman told CBS
News in January. “But
I also think it's hard to look in the face of that sick kid and so
until you're in that boat you don't know.”
Dr. Adam Gaffney, instructor in
medicine at Harvard Medical School and a pulmonary and critical care
doctor at the Cambridge Health Alliance, tells In
These Times that his
experience as a physician has continued to reaffirm the need for a
“de-commoditized, free-at-point-of-use national health program.”
“You see people harmed by our
system—patients going without needed care, skipping doses of
medications because they can’t afford copays, avoiding tests,” he
says. “You quickly realize that the idea that patients need 'skin
in the game' to ensure they appropriately 'consume' healthcare is a
moral travesty of an idea, an insult to the sick: almost nobody wants
healthcare they do not need.” Being a patient and navigating the
traumatic and unfamiliar medical world is difficult enough, Dr.
Gaffney says. “We need not compound that suffering,” he
argues, “with financial worries, medical bills, the anxiety of
insurance networks and high deductibles, the fear of bankruptcy.”
>> The article above was written by Roqayah Chamseddine, and is reprinted from In These Times.
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